NRR, Moving on: Editorial
Emmanuel John M. Carranza
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School of Earth and Environmental Sciences, James Cook University
, Townsville QLD,
Australia
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utilise geoscientific data or analyses to assess, test,
or compare resource-related activities. NRR reports
cover a wide variety of resources, including coal,
water, vegetation and heavy oil. Case studies are
particularly welcome.
However, I only realised the importance of ISI
recognition when, in an interview for an academic
post I applied for [but was not chosen] after
obtaining my PhD, I was criticised that most papers
linked to my PhD are published in a journal not
indexed by ISI. Although ISI recognition of NRR
would be beneficial mainly to our contributors from
the academe and partly to those from industry and
government, I believe it would represent a
culmination in the exciting journey of our journal since it
was founded in 1992 by Richard McCammon.
Indeed, ISI acceptance would be an important
recognition of the high standards of our journal, which we
hope to demonstrate further in the coming years.
The main criteria considered for ISI recognition
include publication standards, editorial content,
international diversity and citation data (Garfield
1990). Publication standards are about timeliness,
international editorial conventions, full text in
English, peer review and inclusion of funding
acknowledgements. I believe NRR currently meets
these standards, but I will ensure that these are
maintained or improved during my tenure. Editorial
content relates to aim and scope, ISI subject
categories, and special issues. Of these, my main concern
is the publication of articles that are coherent with a
single theme (see later). International diversity
relates to authorship, editors and editorial advisory
board members. We certainly need to continue,
however, to attract and increase submissions from
authors in various parts of the world. Since my
appointment as Editor-in-Chief of NRR, I have
succeeded already in making changes to the editorial
board (see later). Citation data determine the
impact of a journal (see later).
Special issues focus attention on hot topics, and
thus, can enhance the profile of a journal, attract top
authors and potentially boost citations. Since 1992,
NRR has published the following special issues:
Materials flow in the New Materials
Societytransition to sustainable development
(1996, vol. 5, issue 4);
Quantitative estimates of the geology of large
regions and their application to mineral
resource assessment (1997, vol. 6, issue 3);
Papers from the 14th International
Conference on Applied Geologic Remote Sensing
(2000, vol. 9, issue 4);
Papers from the Symposium on the
Application of Neural Networks to the Earth
Sciences (2003, vol. 12, issue 3);
Papers from the Canadian Gas Potential
Committee s Symposium on Resource
Assessment Methodologies (2005, vol. 14,
issue 3);
Mathematical geology for resource
exploration (2005, vol. 14, issue 4);
Spatial modeling in GIS (2007, vol. 16, issue 2);
and
GIS-based mineral resource assessment:
special issue in honour of Frits Agterberg (2008,
vol. 17, issue 2).
The issues listed make an average of less than
one special issue per year. We hope to increase
that number to 12 special issues per year
during my tenure. If you have an idea for a
special issue that you think is suitable for
publication in NRR, please contact me.
Aside from me, the new editorial board of NRR
now consists of the following: Deputy Editor
(Douglas Peters, USA), Associate Editors (Deborah
Shields, USA; Timothy Coburn, USA; Andrea
Fo rster, Germany; Mohsen Jalali, Iran; Katsuaki
Koike, Japan; Renguang Zuo, China), Founding
Editor (Richard McCammon, USA), and Editorial
Advisory Board members (Frances Hein, Canada;
Rosa M. Prol-Ledesma, Mexico; Frederik
Agterberg, Canada; Earl Bardsley, New Zealand; John
Davis, USA; Lawrence Drew, USA; Ma rio
Goncalves, Portugal; Cedric Griffiths, Australia; Eric
Grunsky, Canada; Mikael H oo k, Sweden; Jerry
Kuma, Ghana; Jacek Majorowicz, Canada; Ghislain
de Marsily, France; Younes Noorollahi, Iran; David
Pimentel, USA; Alok Porwal, India; Mohammed
Adbdul Rasheed, India; Donald Singer, USA;
Marios Sophocleous, USA; Jorge Yamamoto,
Brazil). Our new editorial board consists therefore
of internationally diverse members with expertise
that adequately cover the current aim and scope of
NRR (i.e., hydrocarbon, geothermal, water, and
mineral resources as well as geomathematics). The
new editorial board consists of old and new
members. I thank the former members who opted to
discontinue serving the editorial board to pave the
way for young blood to contribute to the journal,
and I thank both old and new members who have
accepted to serve the journal on voluntary basis.
The average number of citations received per
paper published in a journal in two preceding years
defines the impact factor (IF) of that journal for a
given year. For year X, the IF of a journal is A/B,
where A is the number of times articles published in
years X 2 and X 1 were cited by [indexed]
journals; and B is the total number of citable items
published by that journal in years X 2 and X 1.
Citable items include articles, reviews, proceedings,
or notes; not editorials or letters to editor. Although
NRR is not recognised yet by ISI, its IF has been
growing since 2000, mostly greater than 0.6 since
2001, and has been mostly greater than 1.0 since
2007 (Fig. 1). These numbers exceed those of many
journals already recognised by ISI.
Aside from authorship, peer reviewers
contribute significantly to the standard of NRR. In fact,
the main dilemma of a journal editor is to find
reviewers who have both the expertise required and
the time to make timely reviews of papers.
Therefore, in every first annual issue of NRR, I would
acknowledge individuals who have reviewed at least
one paper in a preceding year. Those individuals
who have done one or more reviews for NRR
over the past 12 months are thanked and listed
hereunder.
Therefore, with your various contributions as
authors, reviewers, editors in the coming years of my
tenure as NRR s Editor-in-Chief, I hope and will
endeavour that NRR gets recognised by ISI.
REVIEWERS LIST Agterberg, Frits Akpinar, E.K. Albert, Gaspar
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