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« The spectrum of the spectrum | Main | Shooting into the dark »
Tuesday
Mar202012

J is for Journal

I'm aware of a few round-ups of journals for geologists, but none for those of us with more geophysical leanings. So here's a list of some of the publications that used to be on my reading list back when I used to actually read things. I've tried to categorize them a bit, but this turned out to be trickier than I thought it would be; I hope my buckets make some sense.

Journals with mirrored content at GeoScienceWorld are indicated by GSW

Peer-reviewed journals

Technical magazines

  • First Break — indispensible news from EAGE and the global petroleum scene, and a beautifully produced periodical to boot. No RSS feed, though. Boo. Subscription only.
  • The Leading EdgeGSWRSS — SEG's classic monthly that You Must Read. But... subscription only.
  • Recorder is brilliant value for money, even if it doesn't have an RSS feed. It is also publicly accessible after three months, which is rare to see in our field. Yay, CSEG!

Other petroleum geoscience readables

  • SPE Journal of Petroleum Technology — all the news you need from SPE. It's all online if you can bear the e-reader interface. Mostly manages to tread the marketing-as-article line that some other magazines transgress more often (none of those here; you know what they are).
  • CWLS InSite — openly accessible and often has excellent articles, though it only comes out twice a year now. Its sister organisation, SPWLA, allegedly has a journal called Petrophysics, but I've never seen it and can't find it online. Anyone?
  • Elsevier publish a number of excellent journals, but as you may know, a large part of the scientific community is pressuring the Dutch publishing giant to adopt a less exclusive distribution and pricing model for its content. So I am not reading them any more, or linking to them today. This might seem churlish, but consider that it's not uncommon to be asked for $40 per article, even if the research was publicly funded.

General interest magazines

  • IEEE SpectrumRSS — a terrific monthly from 'the world's largest association for the advancement of technology'. They also publish some awesome niche titles like the unbelievably geeky Signal Processing — RSS. You can subscribe to print issues of Spectrum without joining IEEE, and it's free to read online. My favourite.
  • Royal Statistical Society SignificanceRSS (seems to be empty) — another fantastic cross-disciplinary read. [Updated: You don't have to join the society to get it, and you can read everything online for free]. I've happily paid for this for many years.

How do I read all this stuff?

The easiest way is to grab the RSS feed addresses (right-click and Copy Link Address, or words to that effect) and put them in a feed reader like Google Reader. (Confused? What the heck is RSS?). If you prefer to get things in your email inbox, you can send RSS feeds to email.

If you read other publications that help you stay informed and inspired as an exploration geophysicist — or as any kind of subsurface scientist — let us know what's in your mailbox or RSS feed!

The cover images are copyright of CSEG, CWLS and IEEE. I'm claiming 'fair use' for these low-res images. More A to Z posts...

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Reader Comments (4)

Matt,
SPWLA Petrophysics magazine: see http://www.spwla.org/petrophysics. Unfortunately not on-line at all at this point in time, and articles are available at a fee only, after a while only, through OnePetro (http://www.onepetro.org). Other SPWLA chapters have or have had newsletters in the past, and the standout that I am aware of is the London Petrophysical Society (LPS): http://www.lps.org.uk/newsletter.asp but most of all Dialog (http://www.lps.org.uk/dialog.asp), a library of
In Australia where I am based, the SPWLA Chapter is called the Formation Evaluation Society of Australia (FESAus); our monthly technical meetings are a main activity and for the past few years we have published webcasts of them on our website, available to all after one year (and members-only until then).

March 21, 2012 | Unregistered CommenterMartin Storey

@Martin: Thanks for the comment — I hadn't thought of looking in OnePetro. Of course, lots of things are published through that portal, but I don't have a subscription so... I often wonder how much better collaboration would be if really niche journals like Petrophysics were open access. What a boost for the journal, the society, and subsurface scientists. What a way to be more relevant, and more necessary. Though perhaps I shouldn't comment without reading it someday...

Thanks for the tips about FESAus. Here's a link to the webcasts, if anyone else is interested. They're great! I just watched video and slides on 'Permeability from sonic'.

March 21, 2012 | Registered CommenterMatt Hall

HI,
very nice, The title is superb
Thanks for sharing this.
Regards,

March 22, 2012 | Unregistered Commenteragile

Apologies for my half-baked message above: I went looking for the webcast URL so I could include it, when I realized that the website was down... something that happens about twice a year for a few minutes and it was then. Now all is back in order but my first message left before I realized that it was incomplete - but still intelligible for your readers, used to incomplete and imperfect data...

March 22, 2012 | Unregistered CommenterMartin Storey

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