Submissions

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Submission Preparation Checklist

As part of the submission process, authors are required to check off their submission's compliance with all of the following items, and submissions may be returned to authors that do not adhere to these guidelines.
  • The submission has not been previously published, nor is it before another journal for consideration (or an explanation has been provided in Comments to the Editor).
  • The submission file is in OpenOffice, Microsoft Word, RTF, or WordPerfect document file format.
  • Where available, URLs for the references have been provided.
  • The text is single-spaced; uses a 12-point font; employs italics, rather than underlining (except with URL addresses); and all illustrations, figures, and tables are placed within the text at the appropriate points, rather than at the end.
  • The text adheres to the stylistic and bibliographic requirements outlined in the Author Guidelines, which is found in About the Journal.
  • If submitting to a peer-reviewed section of the journal, the instructions in Ensuring a Blind Review have been followed.

Author Guidelines

Please look the article template

The manuscript texts are written in English. Manuscripts will be first reviewed by editorial boards.The main text of a manuscript must be submitted as a Word document (.doc) or Rich Text Format (.rtf) file. The manuscript consists of 3000 - 8000 words (minimum), well-typed in single column on A4 size paper, use Times New Roman 12 pt, Spacing 1. The manuscript contains an original work and have potentially contribute to the highly scientific advancement. The manuscript must be written in English (academic writing).

The manuscript should contain the following section in this order:
a. Title
The title should be a brief phrase describing the contents of the paper and reflect important findings of the article, 12 – 15 words. (Times New Roman 14 pt, Bold).
b. The author’s name
Full name without academic degrees and titles, written in capital of first letter. Do not simplify the name with abbreviations. (Times New Roman 12 pt). 
c. Name of affiliation for each author
The author name should be accompanied by complete affiliation. There are name of department, University/Institution, Postal code, Country. (Times New Roman 12 pt).
d. Abstract
The Abstract should be 150 to 250 words in length. The Abstract should be written in the past tense. Standard nomenclature should be used, and abbreviations should be avoided. The abstract must include introduction, objective, method, significant finding, conclusion, and implications. No literature should be cited. (Times New Roman 11 pt).
e. Keywords
List three to five pertinent keywords specific to the article; The keyword must be different with word in the title; written alphabetically. (Times New Roman 11 pt).
f. Introduction 
Explaining the background, problems, importance of research, brief literature review that relates directly to research or previous findings that need to be developed, and ended with a paragraph of research purposes. A balance must be kept between the pure and applied aspects of the subject.
g. Materials and Methods
Make sure that work can be repeated according to the details provided. It contains technical information of the study presented clearly. Therefore, readers can conduct research based on the techniques presented. Materials and equipment specifications are necessary. Approaches or procedures of study together with data analysis methods must be presented.
h. Results and Discussion 
Well-prepared tables and or figures must be of significant feature of this section, because they convey the major observations to readers. Any information provided in tables and figures should no longer be repeated in the text, but the text should focus on the importance of the principal findings of the study. In general, journal papers will contain three-seven figures and tables. Same data can not be presented in the form of tables and figures. The results of the study are discussed to address the problem formulated, objectives and research hypotheses. It is higly suggested that discussion be focused on the why and how of the research findings can happen and to extend to which the research findins can be applied to other relevant problems.
i. Conclusion 
Conclusion should be withdrawn on the basis of research findings, formulated concerns and research purposes. Conclusion is presented in one paragraph without numerical form of expression. Explain your research contributions to science.
j. Acknowledgement 
Contributors who are not mentioned as authors should be acknowledged, and their particular contribution should be described. All sources of funding for the work must be acknowledged, both the research funder and the grant number (if applicable) should be given for each source of funds
k. References
Manuscripts are written by using standard citation application (Mendeley/Endnote/Zotero). APA (American Psychological Association) reference style is required. Example of writing references in APA style of article journal (Gainiyu et al., 2022) and (Nurwahida & Hernawaty, 2020), proceedings (Massinai et al., 2021) book (Massinai, 2015a), review book (Mokhatab et al., 2019), website (Hokuriku Broadcasting, 2021), newspaper or magazine etc. (Massinai, 2015b), and thesis such as bachelor, master or PhD. (Ramdhan, 2012). In the reference list, the references should be listed in an alphabetical order. The number of references is at least 20 references. The references used should be a minimum of 80% journal article and a minimum of 80% up to date reference (maximum of 10 years). The following is an example of order and style to be used in the manuscript:
1. Journal articles:
Gainiyu, S. A., Shobowale, O. A., & Sikiru, Y. K. (2022). Investigating Seasonal Variations of Soil Thermal Properties (STPs) Under Different Land Use Patterns in Abeokuta, Southwest Nigeria. Jurnal Geocelebes, 6(2), 152–165. https://doi.org/10.20956/geocelebes.v6i2.21866

Nurwahida, & Hernawaty. (2020). Pendugaan Lapisan Akuifer Air Tanah dengan Metode Geolistrik Resistivity Konfigurasi Schlumberger di Berbagai Wlayah Indonesia. Jurnal Teknosains, 14(1), 1–10. https://doi.org/10.24252/teknosains.v14i1.10589

2. Articles in proceedings:
Massinai, M. A., Virman, Massinai, M. F. I., Lasmono, P. G. D., & Tambing, F. (2021). Geophysical investigation for groundwater in the hard rocks of Abepura Area, Papua. AIP Conference Proceedings, 2360(030004), 1–4. https://doi.org/10.1063/5.0059514.

3. Books:
Massinai, M. A. (2015a). Geomorfologi Tektonik. Pustaka Ilmu.

4. Review books/ with editor:
Mokhatab, S., Poe, W. A., & Mak, J. Y. (2019). Chapter 18 - Utility and Offsite Systems in Gas Processing Plants. In S. Mokhatab, W. A. Poe, & J. Y. B. T.-H. of N. G. T. and P. (Fourth E. Mak (Eds.), Handbook of Natural Gas Transmission and Processing (Fourth Edi, pp. 537–578). Gulf Professional Publishing. https://doi.org/10.1016/B978-0-12-815817-3.00018-6.

5. Articles from the websites:
Hokuriku Broadcasting, M. (2021). Earthquake swarm on Noto Peninsula expert “M6-7 in the Vicinity” (in Japanese). News. https://www.mro.co.jp/news/detail.php?cd=29789630.

6. Newspaper or magazine etc:
Massinai, M. A. (2015b). Melihat dari Dekat Keindahan Parangloe, Kabupaten Gowa, Sulawesi Selatan. HAGI Georesonansi Edisi 02, 50–51.

7. Bachelor thesis, master thesis, dissertation, and research report etc:
Ramdhan, M. (2012). Analisis Kegempaan Sesar Sumatera Menggunakan Relokasi Gempabumi Metoda Double-Difference. ITB.