Announcement: Electronic Journal of Severe Storms Meteorology
The Electronic Journal of Severe Storms Meteorology (EJSSM) is a new,
formally refereed, open access, scientific journal devoted to many
aspects of the meteorology of severe weather.
Our website is
http://www.ejssm.org
Papers on theory, prediction methods and techniques, causes, impacts,
and measuring and monitoring in the following areas of severe weather
are particularly welcome (the list is neither exhaustive, nor rank-
ordered):
** Any and all types of severe convective weather
** Lightning and related storm electrification
** Severe local storm effects produced in tropical and winter weather
systems
** Storm damage analysis and mitigation, human or environmental
** Scientific documentation and analysis of extreme and/or rare events
** Forecast development and verification concepts
** Climatology of and/or influencing severe storm events
** Severe winter storms, including heavy snow, ice, and damaging wind
** Heavy rainfall events, convective and nonconvective
** Pyroconvective storms and fire storms
This is an open-access, online journal similar to those already
available for many other branches of science in the U.S., and for
some facets of meteorology in Europe. The final publication fee will
be surprisingly small for a formal journal and very affordable even
for graduate students and those on tight publication budgets ($50
flat for 50 MB and smaller files, grants or exemptions available for
hardship cases).
All accepted articles will be available online at no cost to readers
and archived for future retrieval and citation. Readers who want to
be notified about newly published works can sign up for the automated
email notice, sent whenever a new article is posted.
Please consider EJSSM for your formal submissions related to those
areas, and spread the word to your colleagues about this
groundbreaking new path for severe storms science.
EJSSM is run by a parent, nonprofit, all-volunteer organization
dedicated to providing free and open access to the very latest
findings in severe weather science.
For more details please visit the EJSSM and E-Journals of Meteorology
web site (http://www.ejssm.org).
We welcome any questions, ideas or comments you may have.
Roger Edwards
Editor in Chief, EJSSM
editor@ejssm.org
Dr. David M. Schultz
Assistant Editor, EJSSM
asst.editor@ejssm.org
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