Writing for Earth Scientists :52 Lessons in Academic Publishing

Description

The time has come. You are an Earth scientist. You’ve spent weeks, months, years working on this project – now is the time to pull it together for publication. You might be writing an undergraduate or graduate thesis, a research paper for a leading journal, a note for the newsletter of the local amateur scientific society, a book review or an abstract for a specialist geological conference. How do you make the transition from promising unpublished researcher to established academic author? Of course, the phrase ‘academic publishing’ covers a multitude of sins; monographs, research papers, book reviews, conference abstracts or whatever each requires a different approach. You have to decide what it is you are going to write and where to publish it. There are co-authors, supervisors of your degree, peer reviewers and editors to deal with on the way. But the only way to write like an academic is to write like an academic. . . where do you start? You could do much worse than start here.

There are many books on how to write and be published aimed at research students and other aspiring academics. Many of these are readable, comprehensive and provide good advice. This book is composed of numerous short chapters on this subject, all directly relevant to one or more aspects of academic publishing and aimed particularly at the Earth scientists in the broadest sense. Geologists will be encouraged to use the book as much as a reference as a reader, ‘dipping in’ to the chapters that contain relevant tips, hints and comments to enable them to improve the paper that they are currently writing. The book is intended to be informative, readable and, above all, of practical application for all readers.  In summary, the volume will be a readable compilation investigating many facets of academic publishing relevant to the Earth sciences. It will be of particular interest to postgraduate students, postdocs and new academics 

Chapter

References

3 Theses

Reference

4 Books and Monographs

References

5 Invited Chapters for Books

6 Peer-Reviewed Research Papers

References

7 Short Notes

References

8 Discussions of and Replies to Published Papers

References

9 Book Reviews and Book Reviewing

References

10 Conference Abstracts

References

11 Papers for Non‐Peer‐Reviewed Publications

References

12 Field Guides

References

13 Title

References

14 Abstract

References

15 Key Words

References

16 Introduction

References

17 Materials and Methods/Localities and Horizons

Reference

18 Results

References

19 Discussion and Conclusions

References

20 Acknowledgements

21 References

Reference

22 Why Write? (1)

References

Chapter 23 Line Drawings

References

24 Maps

References

Chapter 25 Photographic Plates

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26 Tables

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27 Co-authors and Others

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28 Cover Letters

References

29 Submission

30 Editors

References

31 Reviewers

References

32 Why Write? (2)

References

33 Reviews

References

34 Revision: Corrections and Resubmission

34.1 Publish ‘As Is’

34.2 Minor Revision

34.3 Major Revision

Review by Schmidt

Review by Jones

Comments by Editor

35 Acceptance

Reference

36 Rejection

References

37 Copyright

References

38 Open Access

References

39 Offprints and Pdfs

References

40 Reading

References

41 Reviewing

References

42 Why Write? (3)

References

43 Productivity

43.1 Write a Conference Abstract

43.2 Write a Book Review

43.3 Write a Short Research Paper

43.4 Write a Big Research Paper

References

44 Space and Time

References

45 Writer’s Block

References

46 Plain English

References

47 The Native English Speaker

48 Why Write? (4)

References

49 Editing Journals

49.1 Small Journal Editor: One-Man Band

49.2 Big Journal Editor: Big Commitment

49.3 Book Review Editor

References

50 A Space of Your Own

References

51 Contracts, Agents, Publishers and  Your First Book

References

52 How Did I Write This Book?

References

Appendix: Book Proposal

BookProposal: ‘Writing for Geologists’

FullWorking Title

Synopsis:A Reference Work

Aims

Scope

Length

‘Sales Pitch’

Completion

Author’sQualifications

Marketfor the Book

Comparisonwith Competing Books

Proposed Chapter Headings

Index

EULA

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