Oliver A. Chadwick, University of California, Santa Barbara, CA, USA
The Earth and Environmental Sciences domain encompasses research on processes impacted by humans that occur on the land surface, in groundwater, and in rivers, lakes and coastal areas. This includes, but is not limited to, the traditional sub-disciplines of surficial geology, geomorphology, physical geography, hydrology, glaciology, geochemistry, biogeochemistry, geomicrobiology, limnology, soil science, remote sensing, climate science, and contaminant fate and transport. Studies published in Elementa should relate to processes that have occurred during the Anthropocene epoch (i.e., since the onset of the industrial revolution ~250 years ago) or earlier if they are significantly affected by human activities.
John F. Burkhart
Associate Professor
Department of Geosciences
University of Oslo, Norway
John W. Geissman
Professor
Department of Geosciences
The University of Texas at Dallas, TX, USA
Mark Fahnestock
Research Associate Professor of Geophysics
Geophysical Institute
University of Alaska, AK, USA
Frank Magilligan
Professor
Department of Geography
Dartmouth, NH, USA
Neil C. Sturchio
Professor and Chair
Department of Geological Sciences
University of Delaware, DE, USA
Matthew Sturm
Professor
Geophysical Institute
University of Alaska, AK, USA