Generated by GPT-5-mini| Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences | |
|---|---|
| Title | Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences |
| Discipline | Earth sciences |
| Language | English, French |
| Publisher | Canadian Science Publishing |
| Country | Canada |
| History | 1963–present |
| Frequency | Monthly |
| Issn | 0008-4166 |
Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences The Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences is a peer-reviewed scientific periodical publishing research on Canada-related and international topics in geology, geophysics, geochemistry, and related fields. Founded in the early 1960s, the journal has chronicled studies tied to regions such as the Canadian Shield, the Arctic Archipelago, the Canadian Rockies, and the Atlantic Canada margin, and has featured work relevant to institutions including the Geological Survey of Canada, the University of Toronto, and the University of British Columbia.
The journal was established in 1963 amid expansion in postwar research at organizations such as the National Research Council (Canada), the Geological Survey of Canada, and provincial geological surveys like the Ontario Geological Survey and the British Columbia Geological Survey. Early issues published findings from expeditions to the Canadian Arctic Expedition (1913–1918), legacy field programs tied to the International Geological Congress, and regional syntheses motivated by discoveries at locales such as the Sudbury Basin, Athabasca Basin, and Vancouver Island. Editorial stewardship over decades included editors affiliated with the University of Alberta, the Dalhousie University, and the McGill University, and the journal adapted to changes in scholarly communication alongside developments at organizations such as the Royal Society of Canada and the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council.
The journal publishes original research, review articles, and technical notes on topics including stratigraphy studies from the Appalachian Mountains, tectonic analyses of the Cordillera, petrology work on igneous provinces like the Deccan Traps (in comparative contexts), and mineral deposit studies referencing regions such as the Abitibi greenstone belt and the Hudson Bay Basin. Papers often involve collaborations among researchers at the University of Calgary, the Université Laval, the University of Saskatchewan, and international partners from institutions such as the Smithsonian Institution, the British Geological Survey, and the U.S. Geological Survey. Methodological content spans isotopic geochemistry applications linking to techniques developed at laboratories like the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, geophysical imaging methods used by teams at the Lamont–Doherty Earth Observatory, and sedimentological frameworks informed by studies from the Max Planck Institute for Chemistry.
The editorial board consists of editors and associate editors drawn from universities and research centers including the University of Ottawa, the Queen's University at Kingston, the University of New Brunswick, and the Institut national de la recherche scientifique. Peer review is conducted by specialists affiliated with organizations such as the Geological Society of America, the European Geosciences Union, and the American Geophysical Union, with external referees from laboratories at the University of Cambridge, the ETH Zurich, and the Australian National University. The journal follows standard ethical policies promoted by bodies like the Committee on Publication Ethics and aligns with best practices advocated by the International Council for Science and publisher frameworks used by Canadian Science Publishing.
Published monthly by Canadian Science Publishing, the journal issues regular volumes that include themed special issues coordinated with conferences such as the Canadian Geophysical Union meeting and the Atlantic Geoscience Society symposium. Distribution networks connect libraries at institutions such as the Library and Archives Canada, the Harvard University Herbaria & Libraries, and the British Library. The journal offers both subscription and hybrid open-access options, accommodating mandates from funders such as the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council and federal policies from Library and Archives Canada-affiliated programs. Digital archiving practices align with repositories and services used by publishers like the Directory of Open Access Journals and indexing through databases maintained by entities such as Clarivate Analytics and Scopus.
The journal has influenced scholarship on topics tied to major geological sites including the Labrador Trough, the Mackenzie Mountains, and the Beaufort Sea, and its articles are cited by researchers at the Canadian Ice Service, the Polar Knowledge Canada program, and environmental agencies like Environment and Climate Change Canada. Impact metrics reported by services such as Journal Citation Reports and Scopus reflect its role in disseminating Canadian-focused geoscience alongside internationally relevant studies from contributors affiliated with the University of Oxford, the University of Tokyo, and the University of São Paulo. Notable special issues have emerged from collaborations connected to the Circum-Arctic Mapping Project and the North American Cordillera Workshop.
Category:Canadian science journals Category:Geology journals Category:Publications established in 1963