20 Bengtson 1978 - Geologiska Föreningens i Stockholm Förhandlingar

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

  • 8/2/2019 20 Bengtson 1978 - Geologiska Freningens i Stockholm Frhandlingar

    1/12

    Guidelines for authorsPETER BENGTSON

    Bengtson, P., 1978 03 31: Guidelines for authors. Geologiska Foreningens i StockholmForhandlingar, Vol. 100, Pt. 1, pp. 7-17. Stockholm . ISSN 0016 -786X.Detailed instructions for authors contributing to Geologiska Foreningens i StockholmForhandlingar (informallycalled GFF) are given in the form of a check-list of 132 items. Theseinstructions apply to all manuscripts from now on . GFF publishes papers in English within thewhole field of geology. Papers on regional or local geology should deal with the N ordic area orits geologically related surroundings. Papers on general and geographically unrelated ma ttersare welcome without restrictions as to the content. The subjec t matter of GFF should maintaina certain balance between the three main sectors of geology in the Nordic countries, corre-sponding to the academic disciplines of Mineralogy and Petrology, Historical Geology andPalaeontology , and Quaternary Geology. GF Fpublishes articles (papers exceeding four pages),notes (four pages or less), blank-page fillers (one-page con tributio ns of diverse kinds, designedto fd l out otherwise blank, left-hand pages a t the ends of papers), literature reviews, and societyproceedings. The aim is to publish article s within nine months of the date of subm ission; notescan usually be published more quickly. Manuscripts not arranged according to the instructionswill be returned to the au thor(s) for rectification. Authors of articles will receive 100free off-prints, authors of notes 50 or 100, depending on the layout in each case. Pages in excess of 16will be subject to page charges. 0 uthor instructions. scie nrijc writing, journ alpolicy , style ofwriting, abstracts, keywords. citations, references, tables. line drawings, photographs,geological nomenclature.

    .

    Peter Bengtson. Paleontologiska institutionen, Bo x 558. S-751 22 Uppsala. Sweden; 15 June1978.The instructions given below will apply to all between the three main sectors of geology in them anu scrip ts received after the publication of these No rdic countries, i.e. the traditional acad em ic disci-guidelines. During 1978 (Volume IOO), Geologiska plines of (1) Mineralogy and Petrology, ( 2 )Foreningens i Stockholm Forhandlingar will be Historical Geology an d Palaeontology and (3)gradually adap ted to the new form at, which will Qu atern ary G eology. Th e joint No rdic journalsco m e into full effect in Volum e 101,Part 1. Li thos , Le thaia an d Boreas , which correspond incoverage to these three subject areas, publishmaterial exclusively of wide international interest.

    For GFF, there is n o such restriction.

    .

    Publication policyScope of Geologiska Foreningens i S t o c k h o l mF o r h a n d l i n g a rGeoIogiska Forertirtgerts i Sfockholt i t Forhand-litigar (informally called G F F ) is issued four timesa year by the Geological Society of Sweden(Geologiska Forenittgen). It contains papers inEnglish (or exceptionally in Swedish) covering thewhole field of geology. Papers on regional or localgeology should deal with the Nordic area (in par-ticular Sweden) or its geologically related sur-roundings. A s regards papers of general interest orpapers dealing with geographically unrelatedmatters, priority for publication is given to resultsemanating from research or work performed inSweden or by any m ember of the Society. Pa pers onRecent material are considered for publication iftheir geological or palaeontological relevance is ex-plicit. It is intended that, in the subject matter ofG F F , a certain balance should be maintained

    Clas s i f i ca t i o t i of c o n t r i b u t i o t uArticles . - Papers exceeding four printed pages.Pages in excess of 16 must be paid for by theauthor.N o f e s .- Pap ers n ot exceeding four printed pages.These are placed in the end of each issue.Blank-page j i l l e r s .- hese a re designed to fit thoseleft-hand pages th at would otherwise have remainedblank in consequence of the fact that all articlesbegin on right-hand pages. Blank-page fillers maybe comments on previously published papers inG F F or elsewhere, presentations of current scien-tific activities, short scientific notes, lists ofpublications, literature reviews, etc.N e w s i t e m . - Any item of interest to GFFsreaders occup ying less than one full page. These will

    Downloadedby[GeologiskaForeningen]at05:3304April2012

  • 8/2/2019 20 Bengtson 1978 - Geologiska Freningens i Stockholm Frhandlingar

    2/12

    8 Peter Bengtson GFF 100 (1978)

    often be placed on almost-blank pages, where apaper has ended in the top third of a page.Liierafure reviews. - We shall aim to cover allnewly released literature on Swedish geology a s wellas a fair selection of foreign literature of relevanceto Swedish geology. Litera ture reviews ar e pub-lished irregularly.Suciefypruceedings.- hese a re intended to reflectthe activities of the Geological Society of Swedenand m ay be re ports of meetings an d excursions.

    Publication timeW e shall aim to publish irtic les w ithin nine monthsof the date of submission; notes can usually bepublished more quickly. This tim e does n ot includedelays due to major referee criticisms and conse-quent reworking of the manu script by th e author(s).Since it is the policy of GFF to maintain a certainbalance between the three main fields of geology,the publication time may occ asiona lly be shorter forpapers within a temporarily underrepresented fieldand vice versa. Although the manuscripts areprocessed in the orde r in which they a re submitted,som require more editorial effort and time and thepublication is consequently delayed. However,assuming a high quality of scientific content, if theinstructions given below are followed, editorialhandling time will be kept to a minimum and thepap er will be published without delay.

    General requirementsAuthors are strongly urged to carefully check theinstructio ns below, item by item, to m ake sure thatthe manuscript conforms with the rules. Manu-scripts which are not arranged in accordance withthe instru ctions will be returned t o the author(s) fo rrectification. The GFF editorial staff does no re-drafting or rewriting of ma nuscr ipts.

    Language1.The language of GFF is English. Only excep-tionally will papers in Swedish be allowed, andthen only if the contribution is judged to be of

    purely local interest. An English summary is re -quired for papers in Swedish and the figurelegends should be in both languages. Th ere is norequirement as to language for contributionsother than articles and notes, but the use ofEnglish is always recommended.

    Style andform2. In general, the papers should follow thecustomary ordering of items, i.e. introduction,material and methods, results, discussion,acknowledgements a nd references, but the re are,

    of course, many permissible variations of thisarrangement.3. Write concisely and simply, using words andsente nces of shor t and medium length rather thanlong ones. Consult a handbook on style, ifnecessary. Writing in a succ inct manne r results in(1) economy in printing costs, and (2 ) economyof effort in reading. If a paper is diluted withirrelevant information, its message is less likely tobe carried through to th e reader. However, con-centration must not be carried so far as to makethe pa per difficult to compre hend for all but a fewspecialists in the subject concerned.4. Use I or we (except in the abstract) ratherthan the (present) author(s) and the activerather than t he passive voice. In any case, d o notmix I and the author in the same paper. Inreviews of ones own publications, overloadingwith I and we can be avoided by using onlycitations by name and year.

    5 . Avoid vague statements (some, rather, fairly, anum ber of, etc.) an d terms n ot generally known.6 . Abbreviations should not be introduced abruptlywithout explanation. At the first mention, thename or title shou ld b e given in full, followed bythe abbre viation within parentheses, for example,The Canadian Society of Petroleum Geologists(CSPG). There after the abbreviation C SPG may be used alone. If the name or title is in alanguage other than English, the explanationshould be in the following form : The GeologicalSociety of Sweden (Sreriges geolugiska under-sukrzing, SGU). Thereafter the Swedish ab-breviation SGU may be used. Note that thefact that a name or title has been abbreviatedmakes no difference t o its gra mm atical treatmentin English. Future mentions of the abbreviationshould be preceded by the definite article, ju st liketh e full name or title, for example, the CSPG,the SGU, and so on.7.Unprocessed data in the form of tables ofmeasurements etc. should generally be omitted,and tabular material shodd, wherever possible,be simplified and incorporated into the text orrepresented by graphs rather than tables. Infor-ma tion given in illustrations an d tables should notbe repeated in the text.8.Use authority and year with systematic namesonly in key positions (headings or otherwise thefirst time the nam e is mentioned , etc.). Fo r detailsof biological nomenclature, authors are advisedto consult the international codes of zoological

    Downloadedby[GeologiskaForeningen]at05:3304April

    2012

  • 8/2/2019 20 Bengtson 1978 - Geologiska Freningens i Stockholm Frhandlingar

    3/12

    GF F 100 (1978) Guidelines for authors 9and botanical no me nclatu re (e.g. Internatio nalCommission on Zoological Nomenclature1964, 1974) and , particularly for details of syn-onymy lists, Matthews (1973).9. Geo graph ical nam es forming p arts of geologicalor geographical expressions should be given inthe form in which they are normally written onmaps issued in the country in question. OnEnglish maps of foreign countries, translatedgeographical names can occasionally be found,especially of large places an d features (e.g. La keMalar, Skald er Bay, River K lar, etc.), but thetendency nowadays is to use the original-language names, regardless of their gram-matical forms. This is to be do ne consistently inGFF. The introduction of this practice meansthat the map forms will be used also fornames that have previously been written dif-ferently in the literature. This is, however, tobe regarded as a purely ortho graph ical change,i.e. it does not imply a cha nge in terminology.Since this new practice is contrary to Swedishusage, a few examples will help to clarify thepoint: (1) Th e Holm sjon Form ation (Swedishholrnsjiiforrnatio~ze~z),ot the Holmsjo For-mation; (2) The Hjalmaren Sandstone(Swedish hjultnarsandstenerz), not the HjaI-mar Sandstone; (3) Th e Kallsjon N appe(Swedish kalls@kkollarz), not the KallsjoNappe; (4) The Malmberget area (SwedishnlalInbergsomrddet),not the Malmberg area;(5) Brbviken Bay (Swedish Briviken), notBrlvik Bay or B ri Bay. Tautology (cf. thelast example) is inevitable and authors shouldnot seek to avoid it by translating geographicalnames. In the cas e of stratigraphic and tectonicunits, only if a name has been formally es-tablished or used traditionally in the olderliterature in a different version can its contin ueduse be justified.10. Note that stratigraphical units (group, forma-tion, member, bed, sandstone, granite, etc.) arecapitalized in English only when the unit hasbeen established (or used traditionally) as a for-mal stra tigraph ical unit. N o new units should beintroduced in the capitalized form prior t o a for-mal definition. Thus, Alunda sandstone forthe sandstone which occurs near or at Alundabut Alunda Sandstone for the formal litho-stratigraphical formation (or member) whosetype locality is.. . a

    11. Where ambiguity m ay arise, do not hesitate toclarify geographical nam es, e.g., the P rovi nceof Smbland (for landskapet Stndland), th eCounty of Uppsala (for Uppsala lun), LakeVattern, th e Dalalven River, SkaldervikenBay, Mount Kebnekajse, etc.

    LengthTh e length of a paper is considered mainly in re-lation to its contents. A six-page article may bejudged to be too long if it is not succinctly com-posed, whereas a well-composed article that ex-ceeds the formal page limit by a few paragraphsma y be perfectly acceptable.Title12. The title should be concise and informative, itspurpose being to draw the attention of thereaders to the main subject of the paper. Itshould be free from noise (Contributions tothe knowledge of. . , Some considerationson . ,Studies on . . ,etc.) or exotic charac-

    ters th at are unlikely to survive treatm ent in in-formation-retrieval systems (question marks,parentheses, Greek letters, mathematical sym-bols, structural formulae, etc.). Subtitles shouldbe avoided unless absolutely necessary. Sub-title matte r should be referred t o in the abstract.13. Rem ember th at the readers m ay no t be familiarwith X-hult or Y-koping or even 2-land, soplease specify the geographical location in thetitle. Giv e the nam e of the cou ntry if it is not ob-vious and if the geographical location is of im-portance.Abstract blockThe abstract is clearly one of the most importantparts of a scientific paper. Several hundred timesmo re people read th e abstra ct than th e full text. Theabstract should convey the scope of the paper,emphasizing the results and conclusions. It shouldnot merely describe the contents of the paper. Theabstract must be intelligible on its own, withoutreference t o the m ain text. It should enable a readerto decide whether or not to read the paper.Remember that the abstract is often read only insecon dary publications a nd that the reader ma y nothave easy access to the full paper. A good title andabstract help information services to publicize workrapidly a nd facilitate future retrieval. T he title andthe abs trac t are the keys to the paper-keep this inmind when writing them.In view of the impdrtance of a good abstrac t andsince too many abstracts submitted require re-writing, a few guidelines are included here.14. Th e a bstr act block (bibliographic identification,abstract, keywords, authors address, andma nuscrip t dat e) is designed t o fit on a standard

    (125 x 75 mm ) library card. Th e ab stract blockmust not exceed 1400 letters and spaces andshould preferably not be much shorter.

    D

    ownloadedby[GeologiskaForeningen]at05:3304April2012

  • 8/2/2019 20 Bengtson 1978 - Geologiska Freningens i Stockholm Frhandlingar

    4/12

    GFF 100 (1978)0 Peter Bengrson15.Do not write the abstract until the research iscompleted an d the m anuscript is in draft form.16. Do not repeat the title of the paper in theabstract, i.e. do not duplicate its contents.17. Outline the field of investigation an d methods ofresearch and detail important findings, con-clusions and their significance. Do not includeanything that is not in the paper itself.18. Avoid literature citations, unless the investi-gation is directly motivated by an earlier publi-cation. If included, a cit ation mu st be accom pa-nied by a complete bibliographical referencewithin parentheses.19. New systematic and stratigraphical namesshould be mentioned in the abstract.20. In order to facilitate retrieval of the paper,authors are encouraged to suggest up to about

    20 keyw ords for the sub ject classification of thepaper. These keywords, which can be eithersingle or compound, should be chosen with theutmo st care, in orde r to cover the co ntent of thepaper as fully as possible. The keywords areitalicized and separated by c omm as and a re runon after the abstrac t, preceded by a squ are sign.The geographical positions should be stated askeyw ords an d coordinate s in degrees should begiven for the smallest rectangle area includingthe region studied. The set of coordi nates shouldbe given thus: latitude (based on the Equator)of the lower right-hand corner, latitude andlongitude (based on the Gre enwic h meridian) ofthe upper right-hand corner, and longitude ofthe upper left-hand corner. If the article is areview paper, this should also be stated as akeyword.Th e indexer w ho aims a t consistency may notactually use the keywords suggested by theauthor(s), since different authors may choosedifferent synonyms for the sam e object or con-cept. However, if autho rs bring terms they con-sider impo rtant t o the indexers attention, theseterms will at least be cross-referenced. A set ofkeywords thus facilitates correct classificationof the paper in the various data bases.21. The address(es) of the au thor(s) should be givenin their original form, i.e. they should no t betranslated into English.22. Immediately after the address(es), give the datewhen the manuscripts was completed.

    .

    Technical instructionsGeneral instruclions23.The text should be typed with a left-handmargin of about 5 cm on one side of white,standard-sized (preferably A4), non-airmail,

    consecutively numbered sheets of paper. Usedouble-spacing of lines (not one and a halt)through out the man uscript, i.e. also for abstract,references, tables, tabl e headings, figure legends,etc.24.To comply with the layout in GFF, themanuscript should be arranged as follows. (1)Title of paper (lower-case letters; d o not under-line). (2) Name of author(s) (capitals), one ormore forenames unabbreviated. (3) Abstractblock: (a) bibliographical identification (biblid)arranged in the following way: Smith, J. K. &Jones, K. L., 190000 00: Title ofp aper. Ceolo-giska Foreitingetis i Stockholm Forhandlingar,Vol. 000,Pt. 0, pp. 000-000. Stockholm. ISSN0016-786X; b) abstract followed by keywords(italicized); (c) name and address of author(s)and manuscript date. (4) Main text, with ap-proximate positions of tables and figures in-dicated in pencil in the margin. (5) List ofreferences. (6) Table headings. (7) Figurelegends. (8) Tables. (9) Figures.

    25. In synonym y lists, d o not tabulate the syn-ony ms but give them in a special text parag raph(this tak es up less printing space). Indic ate eachentry with a small square sign.26. GFF doe s not print footnotes , except in tables.Digressive text (if it cannot be set withinparentheses, deleted or incorporated in the maintext) may be set as discrete paragraphs insmaller type.27. SI units should be used consistently and onlytheir official symb ols a re permitted (m , s, h, I, g,O C , etc.). Prefe r th e prefixes p, n, p, m, k, M, Gand T, thus avoiding c, d and h. However, forareas, the prefix c is sometimes necessary, andfor volumes both c and d may be necessary.Never use a prefix alone o m , notp). Choose theprefixes in order to make the numbers greaterthan 0.1 and smaller than 1000. The unitsshould be spelt out when they are not precededby a numeral, e.g. several metres.28 . Measurements should always be given innumerals, except when beginning a sentence.When the number does not refer to a unit ofmeasurement, it is spelt out if it is smaller thanten. When numbers consist of more than fourdigits, leave a space between each group ofthree. For numb ers with o nly four digits, do notleave a space, except when aligning suchnum bers with others of mo re than four digits, ina column of a table.29. D o not italicize (i.e. und erline in the manuscript)common Latin expressions or abbreviations,such a s in situ, a priori, et al., ca., cf., aff., e.g.,i.e., viz., etc. As a general rule, use italics forspecial emphasis, for new terms when they are

    D

    ownloadedby[GeologiskaF

    oreningen]at05:3304April2012

  • 8/2/2019 20 Bengtson 1978 - Geologiska Freningens i Stockholm Frhandlingar

    5/12

    GFF I00 (1978) Guidelines f o r authors 1 1

    introduced, words in foreign languages and-titles of books an d journals. When in doubt, donot italicize.30. When a line of manuscript ends with the firstpart of a hyphenated compound word, thehyphen should be repeated at the beginning ofthe next line, a s a signal to the com positor that itis to be printed. Otherwise, there is a risk thatthe c omp ound word will be printed as one wordwithout the hyphen.3 1. Always leave a space after a period and a com-ma, except within recognized abbreviations andmathematical expressions (e.g. Fig. 8, bu tU.S.A.).32. Never place a comma before parentheses.33. Question marks should be placed immediately

    34. Avoid using roman numerals.35. Equa tions should be numbered consecutively onthe right-hand side for easy reference in the text.36. Rem emb er that in English the decimal point is apoint and not a comma. Do not leave out thezero, e.g. 0.8, not 3.37 , Th e words Fig. (Figs.) an d Table (unab -breviated) should b e written with initial capitals.The word Figure is spelt out only when itstart s the sentence. F or reference to figures, usethe following examples: Fig. 12A, Fig. 12Aand C, Fig. 12A-C, Figs. 12 and 13,Figs. 12, 14 and 16, Figs. 12-17.38. If a paper contains much material which is notintended for continuous reading but rather foroccasional reference, miniprint (text reduced toa height of ca. 0 .8 mm) m ay be used. Examplesof this kind of material are lengthy localitydescriptions and extensive lists of fossils. If anauthor wishes to publish part of a paper inminiprint, the Editor should be contacted fordetailed instructions.

    39. Necessary corrections to the manuscript maybe made between the lines, as long as the legi-bility of the m anuscrip t is not affected. Do notmake corrections in the margin. (Only proofsshould be corrected in the margin.)

    ajier the term in doubt.

    Headings40. Use three o r fewer orders of headings, indicatingthe order (1, 2 or 3) in pencil in the left-handmargin.41 . Do not write headings with capital letters and

    do not underline them.

    Tables42 . Keep the number of tables to a minimum andmake them as small and simple as possible.

    Type each table with double-spacing on aseparate page for type-setting or prepareoriginals for reproduction as line bIocks ac-cording to the requirements for ordinary il-lustrations. In the lat ter case, avoid all halftones.If a table includes halftones or other items thatcannot be typeset, it should be drawn, letteredand designated as a figure.43 . Avoid vertical lines in tables.44. Compose the tables in such a way that they canbe printed on the pages without turning themthrough 90. If a table is too wide for one page,design it so that it can be printed across twofacing pages.

    A ckuowledgements45.Make sure that the persons whose help isacknowledg ed ap prov e of their being thanked. Itmay seem strange to ask auth ors to obtain per-mission to make acknowledgements, but it issurprising how often this is refused or a requestis made to rephrase the acknowledgement.46.Use I and we" also in the acknorvledge-ments. Write th e name s in full and exclude aca-demic titles, unless the person concerned insistson having his or her title. Provide the name ofthe institution or mention the place where theperson lives, in order to facilitate identification.Literaturecitations47. Citations in the text should be given in the formof the authors surn am e followed by the year ofpublication, with either the year or the wholecitation within parentheses, and in the lattercase without a comm a between author a nd year.For instance, As Smith (1972) reports .. or. ,. s already reported (Smith 1972).4 8 .U s e an ampersand (&) to mark joint author-ship in the reference system. For instance,Smith & Jones (1972).49 . Citations within parentheses of papers bydifferent authors are separated by semicolons,e.g. (Smith 1972; Baker 1973).50. Several papers by the sam e author a re separatedby commas, e.g. (Smith 1972, 1974, 1978).5 1. When two o r more.papers published in the sameyear by the same author(s) are referred to, theyear should be repeated, e.g., Smith 1972a,1972b, 1974), not Smith (1972a, b, 1974).52.When reference is made to a paper by twoauthors, both nam es should always be given; forthree or more authors, the first name followedby e t al. sho uld be used in the text (but all thenames should be written in full in the referencelist).

    D

    ownloadedby[GeologiskaF

    oreningen]at05:3304April2012

  • 8/2/2019 20 Bengtson 1978 - Geologiska Freningens i Stockholm Frhandlingar

    6/12

    12 Peter Bengtson GFF 100 (1978)5 3 . h order to help the reader to find the infor-mation cited, a page reference may be given.This is especially useful for books and longpapers and is essential for quotations. Pagereferences should be given as (1972, p. 34),(1972, pp. 34 and 37), or (1972, pp. 34-

    38), depending on the circumstances.54. Arrange multiple citations in chronologicalorder, starting with the earliest one.55. Alw ays give complete citations, i.e. d o not useop. cit., loc. cit., ibid., etc.56. Name-and-year citations in the text refer toitems in the list of references. Sin ce this list con -tains only published papers, with the exceptionof Ph.D. theses, MSc. theses and papers thathave been accepted for publication, all othercitations have to be given in full in the text.57. Citations of unpublished papers (e.g. internalcomp any reports or undergraduate term papers)should be given as full references in the text, e.g.(N. Stolle, 1979: Oil discovery on Aland.Jatntland Petroleum Co.. biterrial Report N o.I). Always state the nature of the documentand, in the case of a company report, do notforget to get the authors arid the companyspermission to cite the unpublished material.58. Inst ead of burdening the text with full referencesto minor unpublished papers, these citationsmay be converted into personal communi-cations.59. When a personal communication is cited in thetext, the place where the perso n referred to livesshould be given, as well as the year the infor-matio n was received, e.g. (Fre d Johnson , Glas-gow, personal communication 1976). Authorsshould make sure that the content a nd wording

    published w orks hav e been approved by the per-sons cited.60. When the data used are in a written form butnot included in any term paper or report (e.g.sketch maps, field diaries, tables of originalmeasurements, etc.), the citation should specifythese circum stan ces, e.g. (Arne Svensson,Geolo giska institutionen, Upp sala: unpublishedsketch ma p 1976) or simply (. . unpublishedda ta 1976).61. As far as possible, avoid making reference tocurrent research. If absolutely necessary, thewording unpublished results should be used.

    1 of references to personal communications or un-

    Reference listIt is important that all pertinent information begiven correctly for each paper in the reference listand tha t no part of the complete reference be leftout. If the references are given properly, the time

    an d effort needed for retrieval o f the docum ents willbe kept to a minimum. The references in GFFshould be arranged accordin g to the examples givenbelow and the explanations that follow them. Thenumbers after the references refer to the relevantitems in this check-list.Aberg, S . T., 1973: The alkaline district of Alno.Geologia 5(6), 33-58. (Amsterdam.) - 71, 76,78, 82, 85, 87, 89.Bestamningsnyckel ror sulfidmineral, 1902: Tek-nisk tidskrifi 1902(16), p. 4. (Stockholm.) - 3,84.Clayton, L., 1964: Kar st topography on stagnantglaciers. Journal of Glaciology 7 5(2), 107-Dahlqvist, G., 1923: Norrlan ds jordarter. Sveriges

    geologiska undersoknirtg C 368, 1-240. - 9,81, 85.Elstein, J., Kennedy, G. N. & Brooks, P. A. (eds.),1978: All about graptolites. Geological Societyof Cornwall, Special Papers 21, 1-164, PIS.

    Embleton, S. D., 1968a: Ordovician bugs inSilurian vugs. University of Illinois, Bulletin ofGeology, New Series 3(2), 64-68. [Not seen;cited by Elstein et al. 1978.1 - 81, 88.Embleton, S . D., 1968b: Arr oyos and environineii-tal changes in the American South-West. 213pp. 2nd edition. Oxford University Press, Ox-ford. - 64, 76, 78, 85, 87.Embleton, S. D. & Harrison, R.C. W., 1965:Mineralization in Archaean provinkes. 111 B. F.Windley (ed.): The ear& history of the Earth,443-343. John Wiley & Sons, London. - 5,78, 85.Person, A., 1970: Sura vulkaniter, gra nif er ochassocierade bergarter iS,tr&land.I25 pp. Lundsuniversitet, Lund. [Unpublished Ph.D. thesis.] -62, 88.

    Rudemann, G. von, 1978: Reconstructing theJurassic vegetation of western Australia.Alcheririga 3(2), in press. - 62 .Spencer, L. F., 1969: Stratigrap hic revision of theBig River Basin. Bulletin of the TechnicalUniversity of Virgiiiiu I 2 [for 19681, Sup-plement, 21-86, 1 map. - 74, 81, 86, 88.Statens meteorologiska och hydroIogiska institut,195 8 : Nederbordsobsenationer i JonkopingsIan under 1957. 21 pp. - 72 .Stoller, B. B. & Nyman, Gerd, 1962: The North SeaBasin: current state of knowledge. Meddelelserf r a Dansk naturhistorisk forenitig 4 8 , 63-98.(Also as E. V. Stew art (ed.): European ofl-shoreoil. Proceedings of the Internation al Symposiumon European Petroleum Reserves, Brussels,

    112. - 77, 79, 81.

    1-37. - 66, 68, 86, 89.

    1975.) - 67, 89.

    Downloadedby[GeologiskaF

    oreningen]at05:3304April

    2012

  • 8/2/2019 20 Bengtson 1978 - Geologiska Freningens i Stockholm Frhandlingar

    7/12

    GF F 100 (1978) Guidelines / o r authors 13Tretyakov, L.E. (TpeThSKOB, n.E.), 1975: Epa- . cation, and no personal author or editor is

    XliOI lOLIbI 113 BepXHerO OpAOBHKa x p e 6 ~ aYrr~ rri3. Brachiopods from t he Upper Ordovi-cian of the Chingiz Range.] Paleoiitologicheskijzhurnal (rIaneoHTonorrisec~iiiIxyprran) 1975(4), 32-49. [English summary.] - 9, 70, 75,80, 88, 89.Yabe, T., 1977: [The Niigata earthquake.] Bi~lletiiiof the Science hfuseunr of Kyoto, Geology 7(2).112-1 18. [ In Japanese with English summary.]- 75.

    62 . Only published papers are to be included in thereference list, with the exception o f Ph.D. theses,M.Sc. theses or equivalent works (no under-gradua te term papers, such as the Swedish tre-be tygs ippsats D r C-uppsats)and papers thathave been accepted for publication a nd assignedto a specific issue of the journal in question.63. The entries are to be listed in the alphabeticalorder of the authors names.64 . I f there are several references to the sameautho r, the authors nam e should be repeated ineach entry and the references arranged inchronological order, with the earliest one first.65. If an a uth or has published p apers both aloneand with co-authors, the single-author publi-cations should precede the multi-author ones.

    66. D o not u se et al. in the reference list but writeout all names.67. In order to minimize possible he/she doubts incitations, womens forenam es ma y be spelt outin the reference list. If this system is chosen, itshould be used consistently throughout the list.68. Use an am persand (&)between the names of thelast two authors in cases of joint authorship.69. In the case of non-Roman alphabets, the namesof the au thors should be transcribed and in thecas e of Cyrillic alphab ets transliterated, with theoriginal name placed in parentheses.70. In the case of the Russian alphabet, which isby far the commonest Cyrillic alphabet inreferences in GFF, the following system oftransliteration should be used.A A 1 4 1 P R L U S H6 B h J C S 111 S H C HB V K K T T - b * A D h l h l O F b E E H N X K H 3 EHif; Z H 0 0 U T S 10 YU

    r~ n~ Y U b i ~

    3 z n p C I C H A Y A71 . Always retain diacritical marks in authorsnames but alphabetize as if there were nomarks.72 . If an organization is responsible for the publi-

    given, the name of the organization should beused as the authors name.73. I f no person or organization can be used asauthor, the publication should be listed andalphabetized under its title. Avoid using the en-try anonymous, as this bewilders the com-puters.74 . Th e year given after the name(s) of the author(s)should be the year of publication. If this isdifferent from th e volume year, the latter shouldalso be added in square brackets after thevolume (and issue) ncmber, e.g. [for 19721.75 . Titles o f books and papers in Rom an or Cyrillicalphabets must be given in the originallanguages. For non-Roman alphabets, a trans-lated title should be provided and placed withinsqu are brac kets after the original title in the caseof a Cyrillic title.76 . Use lower-case letters for titles of books andpapers, except for nam es of places a nd people orwhere lower-case letters would violate alanguage convention.77. Serial titles (e.g. jou rna ls a nd mo nogra ph series)must be given unabbreviated. Abbreviation istime-consuming for the author, editor and userand introduces errors which may cause con-fusion during later retrieval of the documents.

    78 . Serial titles and titles of non-serial books andpapers are to be italicized (underlined in themanuscript).79 . Cap italize serial titles according to the languagerules in each c ase , i.e. norma lly w rite the title inthe way in which it is written in the serial itself.80. Serial titles in languages using Cyrillic alphabetsshould be given in transliterated form. Theoriginal title should be added in parentheses im-mediately after the transliterated title.81. Om it all regular unit terms, such a s volume,number, part, series, Band, Heft, tome, fasci-cule, etc. (unless ambiguity may arise) but in-clude reference to extraordinary arrangem ents,such as Supplement, Special issue, Yearbook,etc.82. Inclusion of issue numbers in the references isoptional. If included, however, they mustbe included consistently. Although the issue(number, part, etc.) is a purely distributionalitem, its presence in a reference may speed upretrieval when the journal is not bound.

    83. All num bers should be given in ara bic numerals,even if they are in roman in the original publi-cation.84. When in a serial there is no volume number, theyear should be inserted in its place.85. Inclusive pagination (00-00) should be givenfor all papers published in serial publications or

    Downloadedby[GeologiskaForeningen]at05:3304April2012

  • 8/2/2019 20 Bengtson 1978 - Geologiska Freningens i Stockholm Frhandlingar

    8/12

    14 Peter Bengtsori GFF 100 (1978)

    forming part of a book (non-italicized titles).For books and non-serial papers (italicizedtitles), the total number of pages (00pp.) is suf-ficient.86. Auth ors are recommended to state the numberof plates and maps in a paper. These items, ifunpaginated, may otherwise be overlookedwhen copies of the paper are ordered.87. The place of publication should be given forserials only when its omission may cause dif-ficulties in retrieval. It is then placed withinparentheses. Both the na m e of the publisher andthe place of publication should be given forbooks. These items should always be given asprinted on the title page (i.e., d o not transla te ortransliterate them). Fo r publishers operating inseveral places, it is sufficient to give the nam e ofthe first place listed on the title page.88. Sq ua re brackets are to be used for additional in-form ation th at is considered useful to the readerbut is normally not a bibliographic item, suchas transl ations of titles, N ot seen; quotedfrom.. .,In Russian with English summary,Ph-D . thesis, etc. S qu are brackets are alsoused for the volume year, if this is different fromthe year of publication.89. Parentheses a re to be used for the issue number,ed. or eds., places ofpublication for period-icals, th e original form s of transliterated propernames and serial titles in languages usingCyrillic alphabets, and a lso when there a re twoor more parallel serial titles.90. Finally, d o not forget to cross-check all thereferences and citations before submitting themanuscript.

    Table headings an dfigu re legends91. Tab le headings an d figure legends should beself-explanatory and a s sho rt a s possible. If a

    figure contains lettered items, list them etz suitein the legend and insert a square sign immedi-ately in front of each entry (CIA, etc.). Allfigured specimens m ust h ave a reference to theirprovenance and present location (museumnumber or the like).92. Th e table headings and t he figure legends shouldbe typed on separate sheets (i.e. start the tableheadings on a new page and the legends on anew page but do not start each heading orlegend on a new page).

    IlliistratioiisIllustrations are of central impo rtance in GFF. Theyserve to document, display and synthesize infor-

    mation and are thus one of the chief means bywhich authors get their messages through to theirreaders, including the selective reader, who mayonly read the abst ract and scan the pictures t o get ageneral impression of the main points of a paper.Illustrations have to be camera-ready , a nd short-comings in this respect are the most commonreason why manuscripts have to be returned toauthors for amendments. Take special care whenconstructing graphs an d diagrams, in order to m akethem as legible, logical and useful as possible. Inorder to avoid unnecessary pitfalls (and there aremany), authors are recommended to consult ahandbook (e.g. Trelease 19 58; Hoeg 1971; OCon-nor & Wood ford 1975; Hill & Cochran 1977).The following points should be especially con-sidered in the preparation of illustrations for GFF.

    93 .

    94 .

    95.

    96.

    97,

    98.

    99.

    100.

    Plan the figures so that they take up either theentire width of the ty pe area (140 mm) or th ewidth of one column (68 mm). If an in-termediate width has to be used, do n ot exceed104 m m ; this will allow the figure legend t o beplaced at the side of the figure. Th e depth ofthe type area is 209 mm , but there is no obli-gation to use all of it. All figures in GFF areplaced in the text (there are no plates), so, inthe event of a full-page illustration, try t o allowspace for the legend to come within the pagedepth.The cost of reproducing a figure is based onthe smallest rectangular frame in which thefigure ca n be inscribed. U se tha t frame! D o notleave open corners or unnecessary spacebetween items. Do not let text or letteringprotrude outside the rest of the figure.Make sure that the text includes a clearreference t o each illustratio n in turn, i.e. tha tthe illustrations are numbered in the order inwhich they are first referred to in the text.Mark in pencil in the left-hand margin of thetext the approximate position of the illus-trations.The name(s) of the author(s) and the figurenumber should be written on each illustration;for photograph ic prints this should be done inpencil on a label on the back of the prints. D onot forget to indicate up.Line drawings may be submitted as originalsor as sharp, glossy, photographic prints. Donot use celluloid.Line drawing s submitted as originals sho uld beabout twice the size of the printed illustrationan d never m ore than three times larger. T ry toaccommodate the originals within the size ofstandard (A4, etc.) sheets which can be mailedin envelopes.Copies of originals larger than A4 should be

    Downloadedby[GeologiskaForeningen]at05:3304April

    2012

  • 8/2/2019 20 Bengtson 1978 - Geologiska Freningens i Stockholm Frhandlingar

    9/12

    Guideliriesfor aurhors 15supplied on A4-sized paper, suitable for send-ing to referees.101. Co nsider the intended printed size of the il-lustration when choosing the size of letters andline thicknesses. After reduction, the lettersshould be between 1.5 and 2.5 mm high andnever smaller than 1 mm. For graphs, the axesshould be about 0.2 mm thick and the curvesbetween 0.2 and 0.3 mm. Never make linesthinner than 0.15 mm after reduction, asotherwise they easily disa ppea r in the printing.102. D ra w the lines with even thickness andblackness.103. D o no t include grey o r too densely shaded sur-faces in line drawings. A t printing size, up toabout 17 lines/cm and 30% blackness can bereproduced.

    104. If the figures include text, d o not M onum en-talize the Text by Capitalizing Initial Letters.Use lower-case letters on the axes of graphsand do not forget to include the units.105. Avoid heavy black lettering (boldface).106. Use stan dard typographic symbols, such as 0 ,

    A, 0,H, a nd 0 , and include the key in thelegend. Only in cases in which unusual sym-bols must be used should the key be placedwithin the figure itself. The key to differentpatterns in, for example, maps is also to beplaced within the figure.107. Us e tran sfer letters, such as Letraset o rMecanorma, or stencil lettering, not handlettering. Never use usual typescript for letter-ing illustrations. Burnish and spray transferletters so that they remain fixed on the illus-tration.108. On map s, do not forget to indicate the direc-tion of North and to include a graphic scale.Provide a sketch m ap showing the location, ifthe investigated area is small.

    109. Do not draw a rectangle around drawings, ex-cept maps.110. Rem ember that graphs are less expensive toprint and much easier to read than tables.Therefore, except when e-vuct numerical dataare essential ,for the understanding, of th epaper, try to represent data graphically.11 1. Bear in mind that graphs do not allow theretrieval of original measurements and databut are intended to draw attention to a featureof some sort. Thus, in most cases, there is noneed for auxiliary scales or very finely dividedaxes. Add an auxiliary scale only if this willconsiderably facilitate the understanding andinterpretation of the graph.112. Be consistent with th e scales. Pla ce divisionseither outside or inside the graph but no t both.The numbers on the axes should always be

    placed outside the graph, close to the axes.113. Break curve s or lines on both sides of points ingraphs.1 14. In general, kee p the graphs a s clean as poss-ible. Explanations and comments should begiven in the legend, not in the graph itself.115. Photo graph s submitted should be the sam esize as they are intended to be whenreproduced.1 16. Single prints sho uld be unmo unted, preferablywith a 3-mm-wide margin on all sides.117. Com posite figures should be mounted on stiff,white card , ensuring that all the corne rs of theindividual prints are exactly at right anglesand that the outside edges form a square orrectangle. Mount the prints edge-to-edge assmoothly a s possible and paste a white, l-mm-wide, adhesive, dividing strip between theprints.118. Photo graphs should have s ha rp focus an dsuitable contrast, with no pronounced lightareas or heavy shadows. Very contrasty andvery soft photographs require special treat-ment and should therefore be avoided.119. In a composite figure, all items should be ofsimilar tone and contrast.120. If incident light is used for the illumination ofspecimens, the light should fall consistentlyfrom the upper left.121. Include a linear scale on the photograph(scale-bar, hammer, etc.). For fossil, mineraland rock specimens, the magnification mayalternatively b e stat ed numerically in the figurelegend.122. Avoid arrang em ents tha t require blocking-out:they are expensive an d leave the outline of theobjects to th e judgeme nt of the printer. T hus, ifthe background of an object is to be deleted,mak e the background black rather than white.123. M ak e the lettering of items in a compositefigure distinct and consistent. Use capitalletters, white letters on dark backgrounds andblack letters on light backgrounds. Usetran sfe r lettering (simple, semi-boldface). Placethe letters consistently in the same corner ofthe prints, e.g. in the lower left-hand corner.124. Co lou r p hotog raphs are expensive and willalways be ch argt d for .125. Do not attach prints to m anuscripts with paperclips or pins that may damage the image sur-face.

    Submission and editorial treatment126. Before submitting the ma nuscrip t fo r publi-cation, check it thoroughly for errors, incon-sistencies an d violations of the instructions t o

    D

    ownloadedby[GeologiskaForeningen]at05:3304April2012

  • 8/2/2019 20 Bengtson 1978 - Geologiska Freningens i Stockholm Frhandlingar

    10/12

    16 Peter Berigtson GFF 100 (1978)authors. Do not count on corrections beingmade by the editors or, worse still, on beingable to make corrections in proof.127. It is strongly recommended that, before sub-mitting a manuscript, the author(s) should askqualified perso ns to read it critically. This willfacilitate subsequent editorial review, speed upthe editorial treatme nt a nd sh orten the publica-tion time.128. Manuscripts are to be sent to GFFs redak-tion, Paleontologiska institutionen, Box 558,S-75 1 22 Uppsala, Sweden.129. Three copies of the manuscript, includinglegible copies of all the illustrations, are re-quired. T he auth or(s) should retain a com pletecopy as a safeguard against loss in the postand for proof-reading.

    130. It is understood that the paper submitted hasnot been published before and is notsimultaneously being considered for publi-cation elsewhere.131. Authors whose native language is not Englishshould have their manuscripts scrutinisedlinguistically before submission. T he name andaddress of the linguist should be given in acovering letter, and it must be made clearwhether Standard or American English is be-ing used.132. In addition to the address of the author(s), theinstitute or office and ho me telephone numbersshould be given.

    When a manuscript is received by the Editors,receipt is acknowledged a nd the m anuscript is sentfor review by on e or more referees. After review andeditorial scrutiny, the manuscript is either ac-cepted, rejected or returned to the author(s) for im-provement. After revision, the manuscript is nor-mally accepted and provisionally assigned to aspecific issue of GFF. A linguistic check com es nextand the manuscript is then copy-edited for type-setting. Aut hors will alway s have an oppo rtunity toexamine the manuscript before it is sent to theprinters. All final corrections and changes must bemade at this time.

    Proofs and offprintsT he a ut ho rs will receive galley proo fs only and willbe expected to read them carefully and to returnthem promptly to the Editors. In cases of jointauthorship, the proofs will be sent to the authorwhose nam e ap pea rs first, unless it is specifically re-quested that they be sent. to on e of the otherauthors. Authors may be charged for makingalterations against the manuscript.Authors of articles will receive 100 free off-

    prints. Authors of notes will receive 50 or 100off-prints, depending on whether the first and lastleaves are shared with other papers or not.Additional offprints priced on a non-profit-making basis may be ordered from the printingoffice on forms supplied with the proofs. Ordersfo r additional offprints from outside the Nordiccountries must be prepaid. No free offprints will begiven to authors of blank-page tillers or literaturereviews. However, the authors have the right toproduce any number of copies they wish of thesepages.

    Page chargesIf a paper exceeds 16 printed pages, the paymen t ofcharges for the exccss pages is a prerequisite foracceptance. As in the case of additional offprints,authors resident outside the Nordic countries arerequested to pay in advance. The charge forVolume 100 s 2 30 Swedish krono r (E26; USS.53)per printed page. Before submitting a long article,autho rs ar e advised to consult the Editor.

    Blank-page fillersIn addition to articles and notes, GFF will acceptshorte r contri bution s designed to be placed on thoseleft-hand pages t ha t would otherwise have remainedblank in consequence of the fact that all articlesbegin on right-hand pages (occasionally, blankspace elsewhere will be used). Such contributionsmay be presentations of current scientific activities,comments on previously published papers, shortscientific notes, etc. Other items that will be used asblank-page fillers include literature reviews, lists ofpublications of, for instance , the Geological Surveyof Sweden, or lists of contents of recent issues ofother Nord ic jour nal s in the field of geology. The seblank-page fillers can often be published veryquickly-ideally in one to three months from thedate of acceptance but sometimes longer if thenumber of available blank pages does not matchthat of incoming contributions.The blank-page contributions will not carry anabstract, and the length of the text (includingreferences) is limited to 6500 letters an d spaces. If il -lustrations are included, the text will have to bereduced accordingly. A free-standing, one-lineheading (maximum 4 0 letters and spaces), such asReferences, takes u p the spac e of 200 letters andspaces in the text, whereas a blank line in the text(such a s that before a shoulder heading) should becounted as 55 letters and spaces. After the text

    Downloadedby[GeologiskaForeningen]at05:3304April2012

  • 8/2/2019 20 Bengtson 1978 - Geologiska Freningens i Stockholm Frhandlingar

    11/12

    GFF 100 (1978) Guidelines f o r authors 17

    should fol low the name a n d a d d r e s s o f t h e a u t h or ( s)a n d t h e d a t e of the manuscr ip t .T h e au tho rs of blank -page f i l lers will not receive

    proofs , but the p roofs wi ll be read by th e Ed i to rs .

    Suggested readingBarnhart, C. L. (ed.), 1969: The American college dic-tionary. 1444 pp. Random House, New York.Carey, G. V., 1971: blin d the stop: a briefguide topunc-tuation, with a note on proof-correction. 126 pp.Penguin Books, Harmondsuorth, Middlesex.Cochran, W., Fenner, P. & Hill, Mary (eds.), 1974:Georcriting. 80 pp. 2nd edition. American GeologicalInstitute, Falls Church, Virginia.Collins, F. H., 1973: Authors arid printers dictionary.

    496 pp. 1Ith edhion. Oxford University Press, Ox-ford.Cooper, B. M., 1964: IVriling technical reporfs. 188 pp.Penguin Books, Harmondsworth, Middlesex.Council of Biology Editors, Committee on Form andStyle, 1972: CBE style manual. 297 pp. 3r d edition.American Institute of Biological Sciences, Wash-ington, D.C.Fowler, H.W., 1965: A dictionary of modern Englishusage. 725 pp. Revised by E. Gowers. OxfordUniversity Press, Oxford.Gar y, hlarg aret, McAfee, R., Jr. & Wolf, C aro l L. (eds.),1972: Gl oss a~ y f geology. 805+52 pp. AmericanGeological Institute, Falls Church, Virginia.Gurnett, J. W. & Kyte, C. H. J. (compilers), 1972:Cassells dictionary of abbreviations. 254 pp. 2n dedition. Cassell & Company, London.Harts rules f o r compositors and rea ders at the Univer-sity Press, Oxford. 1967: 154 pp. 37th edition. Ox -ford University Press, Oxford.Hedberg, H. D. (ed.), 1976: International stratigraphicguide. 200 pp. John Wiley & Sons, New York.

    Hill, Mary & Cochran, W., 1977: Into print. 175 pp.William Kaufmann, Los Altos, California.Hoeg, 0. A., 1971: Vitenskapelig forf atter ska p. 131 pp.Universitetsforlaget, Oslo.International Co mmission on Zoological Nomenclature,1964: International code of zoological nomenclature.17 6 pp. International Trust for Zoological Nomen-clature, London.International Co mmission on Zoological Nomenclature,1974: Amendments to the International code ofzoological nomenclature adopted since the XVIInternational Congress of Zoology, Washington,1963. Bulletin of Zoological Nomenclature JI(2).

    Lansburgh, W. N., 1964: Almqrist & IViksells sat t -ningsregler. 45 7 pp. Alrnqvist& Wiksell, Stockholm.Matthews, S. C., 1973: Notes on open nom enclature andon synonymy lists. Palaeontology 16(4), 7 13-7 19.OConnor, Maeve & Woodford, F. P., 1975: Writingscientijic papers in English. 108 pp. Elsevier,Amsterdam. [Paperback edition: Pitman Medical &Scientific, Tunbridge Wells, Kent, 1978.1Partridge, E. , 1963: Usage and abusage. 37 8 pp.Penguin Books, Har mo nds aor th, Middlesex.Rees, H., 1970: Rules ofprinted English. 192 pp, Dar-ton, Longman and Todd, London.Ridout, R. & Witting, C., 1973: Thejacts of English.3 5 0 pp. Revised edition. Pan Books, London.Rusk, G., 1975: F6tjiattarskap och publicering. 182 pp.A\VE/Gebers, Stockholm.Strunk, W., Jr. & White, E. B., 1972: The elements ofstyle. 78 pp . 2nd edition. Macmillan, Riverside, NewJersey.Sykes, J. B. (ed.), 1976: The concise Oxford dictionary .1368 pp. 6th edition. Oxford University Press, Ox-ford.Tichy, H. J., 1967: Eflective wir ing fo r engineers,man agers arid scientists. 337 pp. John W iley & Sons,New York.Trelease, S. F., 1958: How to write scientijic andtechnical papers. 188 pp. Williams and Wilkins,Baltimore, Maryland. [Paperback edition: MITPress, Cambridge, M assachusetts, 1969.1

    77-101.

    D

    ownloadedby[GeologiskaF

    oreningen]at05:3304April2012

  • 8/2/2019 20 Bengtson 1978 - Geologiska Freningens i Stockholm Frhandlingar

    12/12

    18 GFF 100 (1978)

    GeologicalSurvey of Sweden (SGU)New publications

    Ser. Ae. Maps of Qiiateriiary deposits. Sheets 1.50 000 with descriptionsNo. 20 hlap-sheetNo. 25 Hoganas NO/H elsingborg NV (with description by E. Daniel). 1977.hlap-sheetNos. 31-32 Nynashamn NV/SV and NO/SO (with description by C. Persson). 1977.hlap-sheetNo. 33 Trelleborg NO (with description by E. Daniel). 1977.hlap-sheetSer. Af: Maps of so& rocks and geophysics. Sheets 1.30 000 with descriptiorisNos. 21-2 4 Pajala NV, SV , NO , SO (with description by P. Padget). 1977.No. 117No. 118No. 119No. 120No. 121

    Ser. Ag. Hydrogeological maps. Sheers 1.50 000 with descriptionsNo. 6No. 7Ser. C. lletttoirsNo. 7 2 6No. 727No. 728No. 7 29No. 730No. 731No. 7 3 2No. 733NO. 73 4No. 735No. 7 3 6No. 7 37No. 738The priblicatioiis inay be obtained from LiberKartor, S-I62 89 Vallitigby. Sweden.

    Enkoping SO (with description by 1. hloller). 1977. sw. Kr.

    hlap-sheetsGoteborg SO (with description by L. Samuelsson). 1978.hlap-sheetsEnkoping SV (w ith description by G.Sti lhos) . 1976.hlap-sheetsLinkoping NV b y H. Wikman & B. Dahlman. 1977.(hlap-sheets only).Hjo NO b y H. Wikman & B. Dahlman. 1977.(Map-sheets only).Kristianstad SO b y K.-A. Kornfalt & J. Bergstrom. 1978.(hfap-sheets only.)

    Trelleborg N O/hfalmo SO b y 0. Gustafsson. 1977.hlap-sheet only.Norrk oping NV; descri tion by T. F agerlind, C.-F.hliillern & J. Pousette. f977.

    Stephens, hl. B.: Stratigraphy and relationship between folding, metamorphism andthrusting in th e Tarna-Bjorkvattnet area, north ern Swedish Caledonides. 1977.Larsson, L. 0.: Statistical treatment of in situ measurements of magnetic susceptibility.1977 .Gottschalk, L. & Nordberg, L.: hlathematical modelling of groundwater level responsein different geological environments. 1977.Toverud, 6.:Chemical and mineralogical aspects of some geochemical anomalies inglacial drift and pea t in nor thern Sweden. 1 977 .Sivhed, U.: A Lower Jurassic ostracode fauna in t he Ca ntofta brick pit , S k i n e , southernSweden. 1977.Welin, E.,Ejnarsson, O., Gustafsson, B., Lindberg, R., Chr i s t i anson , K., Johansson, G .& Nilsson, 0.: Radiometric ages of intrusive rocks in n orthe rn Sweden. 11. 1977.L u n d e g h d h , P. H.:The Grismark Formation in western central Sweden. 1977.Nilsson, R.: A boring through hliddle and Upper Ordovician strata at K oing en inwestern Scania, southern Sweden. 1977.Carlsson, A. & Olsson, T.: Water leakage in the Forsmark Tunnel, Uppland, Sweden.1977.Sjostrand, T.: Caledonian geology of the Kvambergsvattnet area, nor thern Jamtland,central Sweden. 1978.Eriksson, C . 4 . & Laufeld, S. : Philip structures in the submarine Silurian of northwestGotland. 1978.Ahlin, S. & Saniuelsson, L.: Zircon morphology in polymetamorphic rocks of south-western Sweden. 1978.LundCn, B.: Jordartskartering med flygbildsteknik. 1977.[Mapping of surficial deposits from air photographs.]

    60.0050.0060.0050.0060.0050.0060.0050.00

    180.00160.0080.0060.0080.0060.0060.0060.0070.00

    70.0070.00

    110.0030.0060.0040.0030.0030 .0025 .oo50.0040.0080 .0040.0050.0060.00

    D

    ownloadedby[GeologiskaForeningen]at05:3304April2012