Explore the interactive graphics below to see if your article appeared in one of our top ten rankings for 2024.
A big thank you to all the authors who submitted articles to GEUS Bulletin in 2024, and of course to our volunteer peer reviewers and scientific editors.
Most read article in 2024Congratulations to Prof. William Colgan and co-authors, whose article "Sea-level rise in Denmark: paleo context, recent projections and policy implications" was the most viewed in 2024.
Published in 2022, this article was viewed 2570 times. Colgan et al. presented the IPCC Sixth Assessment Report (AR6) sea-level projections for four Danish cities, Aarhus, Copenhagen, Esbjerg and Hirtshals, under the Shared Socioeconomic Pathway family of climate scenarios.
Colgan et al. 2022: Sea-level rise in Denmark: paleo context, recent projections and policy implications. GEUS Bulletin 49. 8315. https://doi.org/10.34194/geusb.v49.8315
Most read article in 2024 published that year
Congratulations to Trine Freiesleben, Roskilde University, Denmark, and co-authors whose 2024 article was viewed 1612 times, making it the most read article published that year.
Freiesleben et al. analysed beach ridges as a potential indicator for determining a Late Holocene open connection between the Limfjord (Denmark) and the North Sea by OSL dating.
Freiesleben et al. 2024: Beach-ridge formation as a possible indicator for an open Limfjord – North Sea connection. GEUS Bulletin 57. 8358. https://doi.org/10.34194/geusb.v57.8358
An “Abstract view” is counted when an internet user visits the article page. A “Full-text download” is counted when a user views or downloads the article in one of the full-text formats, such as an article PDF.
Please refer to our author guidelines to learn more about the various formats offered by GEUS Bulletin and to download article submission templates.
Want to stay up to date with news from the journal? Sign up for our newsletter or follow us on LinkedIn for new article alerts and journal news.