Generated by GPT-5-mini| Annales Géologiques de Belgique | |
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| Title | Annales Géologiques de Belgique |
| Discipline | Geology, Paleontology, Stratigraphy |
| Language | French, English |
| Abbreviation | Ann. Géol. Belg. |
| Publisher | Société géologique de Belgique |
| Country | Belgium |
| History | 1876–present |
| Frequency | irregular / periodic |
| Issn | 0003-3662 |
Annales Géologiques de Belgique is a long-running scholarly journal published by the Société géologique de Belgique that chronicles research in geology, paleontology, and stratigraphy with a focus on Belgium and adjacent regions such as the Ardennes, the Paris Basin, and the North Sea. The journal has documented contributions from figures associated with institutions like the Université libre de Bruxelles, KU Leuven, and the Royal Belgian Institute of Natural Sciences while intersecting research linked to projects led by entities such as the European Commission and the NATO Science Programme. Over its history the periodical has acted as a venue for studies connected to events like the Industrial Revolution's mining expansion, the Hercynian orogeny investigations, and North Sea hydrocarbon exploration.
The journal was founded under auspices of the Société géologique de Belgique during the late 19th century, a period contemporaneous with publications like Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society and Bulletin de la Société Géologique de France, and emerged amid debates spurred by the work of geologists such as Louis Agassiz, Charles Lyell, and regional scholars affiliated with the Royal Society of Belgium. Early volumes reflected research tied to the geology of the Ardennes and the stratigraphic schemes employed in the Paris Basin and the London Basin, and its editors collaborated with field initiatives connected to the International Geological Congress. Throughout the 20th century the journal published studies influenced by figures from institutions like the University of Cambridge, Université de Liège, and Ghent University and responded to methodological shifts introduced by workers associated with the Geological Survey of Belgium and the British Geological Survey.
The journal covers stratigraphy, paleontology, sedimentology, structural geology, and regional mapping, often reporting work linked to the Devonian, Carboniferous, Permian, Cretaceous, and Quaternary successions. Articles frequently concern fossil groups examined by specialists comparable to those from the Natural History Museum, London, the Smithsonian Institution, and the Muséum national d'Histoire naturelle, and document discoveries pertinent to taxa described in contexts similar to the contributions of Gideon Mantell or Georges Cuvier. Studies also interface with hydrocarbon and mineral exploration carried out by companies once partnered with agencies such as the European Commission Horizon programmes and multinational firms operating in the North Sea and the Benelux region.
Published by the Société géologique de Belgique, the journal has been edited by scholars appointed from universities including Université libre de Bruxelles, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, and Université de Liège; editorial boards have drawn reviewers from organizations like the Royal Belgian Institute of Natural Sciences and the Belgian Geological Survey. The title has appeared in French and English to accommodate contributors from institutions such as Université Paris-Saclay, University of Oxford, and Utrecht University, and it has issued special memoirs and monographs akin to series published by the Geological Society of London and the Deutsche Geologische Gesellschaft. Production models have evolved in dialogue with publishers and indexing services associated with entities like the Clarivate Analytics family of databases and comparable aggregators.
The journal is indexed alongside journals in databases used by researchers at the Royal Society, Academia Europaea, and national research councils; it has been catalogued in bibliographic services comparable to those maintained by Scopus, Web of Science, and regional library consortia connecting the Bibliothèque royale de Belgique and university libraries of Leuven and Liège. Coverage facilitates discovery by authors affiliated with projects funded by agencies such as the European Research Council and enables citation tracking consistent with standards maintained by indexing organizations like the CrossRef member community.
Over its run the journal published influential regional syntheses on the tectonics of the Ardennes and the stratigraphy of the Paris Basin that were cited by researchers at the Geological Society of America, the International Union of Geological Sciences, and national surveys including the British Geological Survey. Landmark papers included faunal descriptions comparable in impact to early works by Adam Sedgwick and Roderick Murchison for Paleozoic successions, and methodological contributions aligning with sedimentological advances promoted by scientists at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and ETH Zurich. Contributions by Belgian and international authors have been used in basin modelling for the North Sea and in correlation schemes adopted by geological agencies across Western Europe.
Back issues are held by repositories and national libraries such as the Bibliothèque royale de Belgique, the collections of the Royal Belgian Institute of Natural Sciences, and university libraries at Ghent University and KU Leuven, and are available through interlibrary loan networks connecting institutions like the British Library and the Library of Congress. Contemporary articles are distributed to subscribers, university consortia, and participating societies, and are discoverable through indexing services relied upon by researchers funded by the European Research Council and by participants in programs administered by the European Commission.
Category:Geology journals Category:Belgian scientific journals