{"title":"Foreword to the special issue arising from the 9th European Conference on Mineralogy and Spectroscopy","authors":"F. Laufek, J. Plášil, J. Cempírek, R. Škoda","doi":"10.3190/jgeosci.302","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Spectroscopy methods provide valuable information about the local structure of minerals, since they do not depend on long-range periodicity (they are sensitive to defects or substitutions and vice versa), and, therefore represent great complementary techniques to diffraction methods that are used to analyze periodic (global) structures of minerals. Spectroscopy techniques have been successfully applied to the minerals during past decades, namely due to still-growing possibilities connected with the evolution of the instrumentation and data analysis. Following the European Spectroscopic Conferences in Rome (1988), Berlin (1995), Kiev (1996), Paris (2001), Vienna (2004), Stockholm (2007), Potsdam (2011) and Rome (2015), the 9th European Conference on Mineralogy and Spectroscopy (ECMS 2019) took place at Břevnov Monastery, Prague, Czech Republic on September 10–13, 2019. The conference brought together 111 participants from 20 countries. One hundred two oral and poster contributions were presented during three days. Among these contributions, six invited keynote-talks were presented by Peter C. Burns (University of Notre Dame, USA), Janice Bishop (SETI Institute, USA), Sergey V. Krivovichev (St. Petersburg State University, Russia), Anna Vymazalová (Czech Geological Survey, Czechia), Jural Majzlan (Friedrich Schiller Universität, Germany) and Sergey S. Lobanov (GFZ German Research Center for Geosciences, Germany). About one third of the delegates were students, who had the opportunity to present their work to broad international audience. Two workshops focused on gemstone deposits and training in crystallographic com-","PeriodicalId":15957,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Geosciences","volume":"65 1","pages":"1-2"},"PeriodicalIF":1.1000,"publicationDate":"2020-04-12","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of Geosciences","FirstCategoryId":"89","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.3190/jgeosci.302","RegionNum":4,"RegionCategory":"地球科学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q3","JCRName":"GEOCHEMISTRY & GEOPHYSICS","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Spectroscopy methods provide valuable information about the local structure of minerals, since they do not depend on long-range periodicity (they are sensitive to defects or substitutions and vice versa), and, therefore represent great complementary techniques to diffraction methods that are used to analyze periodic (global) structures of minerals. Spectroscopy techniques have been successfully applied to the minerals during past decades, namely due to still-growing possibilities connected with the evolution of the instrumentation and data analysis. Following the European Spectroscopic Conferences in Rome (1988), Berlin (1995), Kiev (1996), Paris (2001), Vienna (2004), Stockholm (2007), Potsdam (2011) and Rome (2015), the 9th European Conference on Mineralogy and Spectroscopy (ECMS 2019) took place at Břevnov Monastery, Prague, Czech Republic on September 10–13, 2019. The conference brought together 111 participants from 20 countries. One hundred two oral and poster contributions were presented during three days. Among these contributions, six invited keynote-talks were presented by Peter C. Burns (University of Notre Dame, USA), Janice Bishop (SETI Institute, USA), Sergey V. Krivovichev (St. Petersburg State University, Russia), Anna Vymazalová (Czech Geological Survey, Czechia), Jural Majzlan (Friedrich Schiller Universität, Germany) and Sergey S. Lobanov (GFZ German Research Center for Geosciences, Germany). About one third of the delegates were students, who had the opportunity to present their work to broad international audience. Two workshops focused on gemstone deposits and training in crystallographic com-
光谱学方法提供了有关矿物局部结构的有价值的信息,因为它们不依赖于长期周期性(它们对缺陷或取代敏感,反之亦然),因此是用于分析矿物周期性(整体)结构的衍射方法的重要补充技术。光谱学技术在过去几十年中已成功地应用于矿物,这是由于仪器和数据分析的发展所带来的可能性不断增加。继罗马(1988年)、柏林(1995年)、基辅(1996年)、巴黎(2001年)、维也纳(2004年)、斯德哥尔摩(2007年)、波茨坦(2011年)和罗马(2015年)的欧洲光谱学会议之后,第九届欧洲矿物学和光谱学会议(ECMS 2019)于2019年9月10日至13日在捷克共和国布拉格Břevnov修道院举行。会议汇集了来自20个国家的111名与会者。三天内提交了120份口头和海报稿件。其中,Peter C. Burns(美国圣母大学),Janice Bishop(美国SETI研究所),Sergey V. Krivovichev(俄罗斯圣彼得堡国立大学),Anna vymazalov(捷克地质调查局,捷克),Jural Majzlan (Friedrich Schiller Universität,德国)和Sergey S. Lobanov(德国GFZ德国地球科学研究中心)做了6次特邀主题演讲。大约三分之一的代表是学生,他们有机会向广泛的国际观众介绍他们的作品。两个讲习班集中于宝石矿床和晶体学培训
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Geosciences is an international peer-reviewed journal published by the Czech Geological Society with support from the Czech Geological Survey. It accepts high-quality original research or review papers dealing with all aspects of the nature and origin of igneous and metamorphic rocks. The Journal focuses, mainly but not exclusively, on:
-Process-oriented regional studies of igneous and metamorphic complexes-
Research in structural geology and tectonics-
Igneous and metamorphic petrology-
Mineral chemistry and mineralogy-
Major- and trace-element geochemistry, isotope geochemistry-
Dating igneous activity and metamorphic events-
Experimental petrology and mineralogy-
Theoretical models of igneous and metamorphic processes-
Mineralizing processes and mineral deposits.
All the papers are written in English, even though they may be accompanied by an additional Czech abstract. Each contribution is a subject to peer review by at least two independent reviewers, typically at least one from abroad. The Journal appears 2 to 4 times a year. Formally it is divided in annual volumes, each of them including 4 issues.