For over 20 years, Earth scientists have shared their research with colleagues in the GEUS Bulletin, an open-access and peer-reviewed journal published by the Geological Survey of Denmark and Greenland (GEUS).
Now, the journal's publications are available online in a more modern format.
“We have strengthened our brand with a new logo and design. The website's content is now much easier to navigate. I am really pleased with the result. It has become beautiful and user-friendly,” says Catherine Jex, the editor-in-chief of the GEUS Bulletin.
User needs at the centreNew features on geusbulletin.org include:
“We have updated the site to meet our users' needs. It was important to the editorial team and for our authors and readers that it is modern but also long-lasting,” says Catherine Jex.
GEUS Bulletin shares with other journalsAll content on the new website remains freely accessible to everyone without any paywall: GEUS Bulletin’s content is Diamond Open Access, a scientific publishing model where journals and platforms do not charge fees to either authors or readers.
GEUS Bulletin uses the community-based software called Open Journal Systems, created by the Public Knowledge Project (PKP), which scientific journals use to publish articles.
Stine Øckenholt, a graphic designer in GEUS’s drawing office, designed the new look for the GEUS Bulletin, which has now been implemented by PKP.
Other journals using Open Journal Systems and wishing for a similar appearance can soon download a modified version named ‘Ammonite’. Link coming soon.
The GEUS Bulletin was first published in 2003, succeeding other GEUS journals that have been published since 1899. GEUS Bulletin publishes peer-reviewed geoscientific articles, monographs, and map descriptions from Denmark, Greenland, and the Arctic region.