Online publications grouped under the aegis "Geoscience e-Journals"
(a former web ring converted into a genuine portal)
incorporate those peer-reviewed electronic journals dedicated to open access
publishing in the field of Earth Sciences (geochemistry, geophysics, paleontology,
regional geology, stratigraphy, geography, etc.), that is those e-journals
that permit free online access to all or at least a major part of their current
issue and/or archives.
In 2006, GeoRef
started covering a "limited" number of electronic journals and series that are openly available on the web. Excerpt from this list of Georef Core Journals:
The Thomson Web of Science provides access to current and retrospective scientific information from high impact research journals in the world. Excerpt from the Thomson Scientific Master Journal List:
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* The State of Paleontology in New Zealand.- Crampton, James S. and Cooper, Roger A. * Discrimination of Fenestrate Bryozoan Genera in Morphospace.- Hageman,Steven J. and McKinney, Frank K. * The Digital Plateosaurus I: Body Mass, Mass Distribution, and Posture Assessed by Using CAD and CAE on a Digitally Mounted Complete Skeleton.- Mallison, Heinrich * Microconchid-Dominated Hardground Association from the Late Pridoli (Silurian) of Saaremaa, Estonia.- Vinn,Olev and Wilson, Mark A. * Moncharmontzeiana: New Name for Pytine Moncharmont Zei and Sgarella, 1978 Non Fortey, 1975.- Patterson, R. Timothy * Benthic Foraminifera from the Diatomaceouis Mud Belt Off Nambia: Characteristic Species for Severe Anoxia.- Leiter, Carola and Altenbach, Alexander V. * A Guide to Late Albian-Cenomanian (Cretaceous) Foraminifera from the Queen Charlotte Islands, British Columbia, Canada.- Patterson, R. Timothy; Haggart, James W.; Dalby, Andrew P. * Seasonal Environmental and Chemical Impact on Thecamoebian Community Composition in an Oil Sands Reclamation Wetland in Northern Alberta.- Neville, Lisa A.; McCarthy, Francine M.G.; MacKinnon, Michael D. * Ecology of Paleocene-Eocene Vegetation at Kakahu, South Canterbury, New Zealand.- Pole, Mike * New Interpretation of the Postcranial Skeleton and Overall Body Shape of the Placodont Cyamodus Hildegardis Peyer, 1931 (Reptilia, Sauropterygia).- Scheyer, Torsten M. * Smithsonian's Prehistoric Pals Series (by Dawn Bentley, Ben Nussbaum, and G.B. McIntosh).- Reviewed by Elisabeth Marcot, Jonathan Marcot, and Karen Sears
* Pre-Late Carboniferous geology along the contact of the Saxothuringian and Tepla-Barrandian zones in the area covered by younger sediments and volcanics (western Bohemian Massif, Czech Republic).- Mlcoch B & Konopasek J
* Volcanic history of the Conchagua Peninsula (eastern El Salvador).- Rapprich V, Erban V, Farova K, Kopackova V, Bellon H & Hernandez W
* Unidirectional solidification textures and garnet layering in Y-enriched garnet-bearing aplite-pegmatites in the Cadomian Brno Batholith, Czech Republic.- Honig S, Leichmann J & Novak M
* The granite system near Betliar village (Gemeric Superunit, Western Carpathians): evolution of a composite silicic reservoir .- Kubis M & Broska I
* The supergene mineral association with brandholzite from Pernek, Male Karpaty Mountains, Slovak Republic.- Sejkora J, Ozdin D & Duda R
* The role of silver in the crystal structure of pyrargyrite: single crystal X-ray diffraction study .- Laufek F, Sejkora J & Dusek M
Bernard Mamet & Alain Préat.- Un atlas d'algues calcaires. Carbonifère, Alaska arctique.- Atlas illustrant 54 genres d'Algues marines associées à quelques microproblématiques. Ceux-ci sont observés dans les coupes de terrain et les puits de forage du Groupe de Lisburne dans toute l'étendue des Cordillères arctiques de l'Alaska (Brooks Range).- SRef-ID: http://overview.sref.org/1634-0744/CG2010_SP01.- Handle-ID: http://hdl.handle.net/2042/XXXXX
Jean-Pierre Bellier, Robert Mathieu & Bruno Granier.- Short Treatise on Foraminiferology (Essential on modern and fossil Foraminifera).- After some forty years in the academic world and before abandoning a position as an employee of the State educational system to enter the new world of "pensioners", it seemed worthwhile to the first author (J.-P.B.) of this brief discussion to compile a short document that presents a synopsis of the knowledge acquired, taught and put to use for more than four decades. This fascicle reviews only the foraminifers, which, along with calcareous nannofossils, are the fundamental tools of modern biostratigraphy, used for worldwide oceanographic studies and for the correlation of oil wells. It deals essentially with the small foraminifers, that is those of modest size without a complex internal architecture. These include the planktonic foraminifers of which the rapid evolution and great dispersion permit the establishment of reliable biochronologic scales of reference.
This short course is intended for students preparing for the CAPES (Certificat d'aptitude au professorat de l'enseignement du second degré = Certificate of Aptitude for a Professorship of Instruction in the Second Grade), for students working toward the Aggregation in Natural Sciences in pursuit of a scientific career in the universities or in the CNRS (Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique = National Centre for Scientific Research), and for students who hope to work in the oil industry where a specialization in the field of micropaleontology is considered useful and is still valued. It will also interest amateur naturalists and that portion of the general public attracted by the beauties of the microscopic world, now living, or extinct and represented only by fossils.- SRef-ID: http://overview.sref.org/1634-0744/CG2010_B02.- Handle-ID: http://hdl.handle.net/2042/XXXXX
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