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 or Microsoft Word.
  • Where available, DOI or URLs for the references have been provided.
  • The text is 1.15-spaced; a 10-point font are used 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.

Author Guidelines

  • Submitted papers can be written in English or French, according to the Template of the journal, and must use clear, unambiguous, technically correct text. The article must be conforming to professional standards of courtesy and expression.
  • Nature & Technology Journal follows a double-blind peer review process, whereby authors do not know reviewers and vice versa.
  • Upon submission, a paper will be internally assessed by some of our editors. If the paper is deemed to be of inferior quality, poor presentation or unsuitable for the journal, the submission will be rejected without full refereeing, and a rejection response will be sent to the submitting author. The article is suitable for publication if it receives at least two positive reviews.
  • The journal aims to offer the fastest possible speed of publication. The review process takes approximately three weeks for a 1st lecture, and three months to final decision.
  • All contributors who do not meet the criteria for authorship should be listed in an Acknowledgements section
  • The submission of a manuscript previously rejected by the journal will generally not be considered for publication until it is reformulated with a new title
  • The publication with NATEC is free of charges (no submission charges / no article processing charges).

     It is possible to submit papers presented at conferences for subsequent publication in special issues of the NATEC journal.

General recommandation

     Sections, which may vary in their contents according to the subject of the article, can be used to organize the body of your article.

     Headings should be numbered 1, 2, 3 ... etc.; 1.1, 1.2., 1.3 …etc. for the first subheading, then 1.1.1, 1.1.2, 1.1.3. ... etc. for the second subheading. Avoid using more than 4 subsections.

     Research articles should be divided into: Introduction, Materials and Methods, Results, Discussion, Conclusions, References.

     To avoid unnecessary errors, it is strongly recommended to use the "spelling and/or grammar checker" functions of Word©.

     The use of an acronym or technical abbreviation must be define upon first appearance in the text. Keep abbreviations to a minimum. Nomenclature codes must be respected according to international conventions. Latin words should be italicized (et al. ...), especially names of plants or animals. When a species name appears for the first time, the full name of the species must be included (e.g. Olea europaea L.). The taxonomic references or flora used must be specified.

     Do not use "according to [3] (action) "except at the beginning of a sentence, e.g., "Reference [3] shows ...". Several references are numbered in the same square brackets e.g. [2, 6] and not [2] and [6]. Also, successive references should be written in the form [7-9] and not [7], [8], [9].

1. Introduction

     The Introduction should briefly outline the specific problem studied and the research approach and objectives of the work, avoiding a detailed literature review or a summary of the results.

     It should place the study in a broad context and highlight why it is important. Highlight controversial and diverging hypotheses when necessary. Finally, highlight the main conclusions. Keeps the introduction comprehensible to scientists working outside the topic of the paper.

2. Materials and methods

     This section must contain specific details about the materials studied; instruments used and related experimental information, as concise as possible, while containing all the information necessary to ensure reproducibility. Summarize the data collected and the analysis performed on these data relevant to the forthcoming reasoning. After presenting the results, you are able to evaluate and interpret their implications, particularly in relation to your original hypotheses.

     The title "Material and Method" can be divided into subsections. It should contain all the information about the experimental procedure and the materials used to perform the experiments.

3. Results and Discussion

     A single combined Results and Discussion section is often more appropriate than two separate sections. It should explore the significance of the results of the work, not repeat them. The discussion should be succinct and not excessively speculative. Avoid extensive citations and discussions of published literature.

     SI Units (International System of Units) should be used. Imperial, US customary and other units should be converted to SI units whenever possible.

     The title "Results and Discussion" can also be divided into subsections.

4. Tables and Figures

     Charts and tables, numbered consecutively in Arabic, should be inserted directly into the text and placed as close as possible to the point where they are first cited.

     The figure or table caption, in Times New Roman 8 point, should be a brief description of the entire figure or table.

     For figures, place the captions centered on the next line of each figure (Figure 1). Do not use text boxes to place figures. All images must be in JPEG, PNG, TIFF or similar standard format.

     Graphs (curves, histograms, sectors, bars, scatterplots...) must be editable by the editor and not appear as an image.

     Illustrations can be inserted using the "Tables and Figures" menu, by choosing "... from a file", or by embedding the graphic as an OLE object. The text should not run along the sides of a figure. If it does, right-click on the figure, choose "Format Object (/Figure)", choose the "Wrapping" tab and select "Top & bottom". Figures are normally linked to a paragraph to which they are linked and move with it.

     The tables must be inserted as editable text, not as images, with their captions placed above them.

5. Lists

     For tabular summaries that do not need to be presented in a table format, lists are often used. Lists can be either numbered or bulleted. Below are examples of both:

  1. The first entry in this list
  2. The first sub-entry
  3. The second sub-entry
  4. The last sub-entry
  • An item in a bulleted list
  • Another item

6. Equations

     Equations should be editable by the editorial office and not appear in a picture format.

     They start at the far left of a single line, and are numbered consecutively. Equation numbers should be enclosed in parentheses and placed in front of the equation at the far right of the line.

     The use of MathType is recommended for writing and displaying equations online. This will provide the most reliable result. If this is not possible, Equation Editor or Microsoft's Insert → Equation function is acceptable. Except for the "Symbol" font. Avoid using MathType, Equation Editor or the Insert → Equation function to insert a simple one-variable equation (e.g., "a² + b² = c²"), Greek or other symbols (e.g., β, Δ, or ′ [prime]), or mathematical operators (e.g., x, ≥, or ±) as you type.

     The terms of the equation and the symbols, if not explained in the text, will be introduced in a in a legend below the equation. For example:

A=A0exp(λt)                                                                                                      (3)

Where:

A is the activity of the radioactive isotope at depth (z=x cm) in a sediment

Ao is the activity of the radioactive isotope at the surface (z=0)

λ is the radioactive decay constant of the isotope

t is the age (year) of the sediment at depth (z=x cm)

7. Conclusion

     The conclusion should not be a summary of the results, but a short synthesis of the significance of the new results. List other related approaches to the problem in question and compare the results.

Acknowledgements

    In this section you can briefly acknowledge any support given other than the authors who contributed to the study. This may include administrative and technical support (e.g., by providing language assistance, writing assistance, or proofreading the article, etc.), or list any relevant grants (e.g., materials used for experiments).

Conflicts of interest

     Authors must identify and declare any personal circumstances or interest that may be perceived as influencing the representation or interpretation of reported research results. Examples of potential conflicts of interest include but are not limited to financial interests: Any role of the funding sponsors in the choice of research project; design of the study; in the collection, analyses or interpretation of data; in the writing of the manuscript; or in the decision to publish the results must be declared in this section, and non-financial interests such as personal or professional relationships, affiliations, personal beliefs.

     The corresponding author must include a summary statement in the manuscript in this section placed just before the reference list. The statement should reflect all the collected potential conflict of interest disclosures in the form.

     If there is no conflict of interest, state "The authors declare no conflict of interest."

References

     The bibliography includes all the references cited and only them. The references, in Times New Roman 8 point single line spacing and left alignment, will be arranged and numbered by Arabic numbers in square brackets in the chronological order of their citation in the text. You must ensure that all references are cited in the text and vice versa. The list of references should contain only bibliographic references. Each reference should contain only one citation from the literature.

     The reference number should follow the Vancouver style. It is essential to include author(s) name(s), journal or book title, article or chapter title (where required), year of publication, volume and issue (where appropriate) and pagination. DOI numbers (Digital Object Identifier) are highly encouraged.

     The bibliography software package (EndNote, Zotero, Mendeley) reference manager are recommended.

     Below are sample citations:

  1. Journal article with DOI:
  • Polack , Thomas S., Kitchin N., Absalon J., Gurtman A., Lockhart S. et al., Safety and Efficacy of the BNT162b2 mRNA Covid-19 Vaccine, N. Engl. J. Med., 383 (2020): 2603-2615. https://doi.org/10.1056/nejmoa2034577.
  1. Journal article available online:
  • Bekro Y-A., Tanoh S.,  N’gaman-kouassi C-C.,  Boa D.,  Mamyrbekova-békro J-A., Activité antioxydante des extraits bruts hydroéthanoliques et hydroacétoniques des organes de quatre plantes médicinales de Côte d’Ivoire, Revue Nature et Technologie, 11 (2) (2019) : 28-34. Accessible en ligne : https://www.asjp.cerist.dz/en/article/102956 (Consulté le JJ/MM/AAAA).
  1. Reference to a book:
  • Newman J., Electrochemical Systems, 2nd ed., Prentice-Hall, Englewood Cliffs, NJ, 1991. ISBN : 0132487586
  1. Reference to a chapter in a book:
  • Mettam G.R., Adams L.B., How to prepare an electronic version of your article, in: B.S. Jones, R.Z. Smith (Eds.), Introduction to the Electronic Age, E-Publishing Inc., New York, 2009, pp. 281–304.
  1. Reference to a website:
  1. Reference to a Database :

[dataset] M. Oguro, S. Imahiro, S. Saito, T. Nakashizuka, Mortality data for Japanese oak wilt disease and surrounding forest compositions, Mendeley Data, v1, 2015. https://doi.org/10.17632/xwj98nb39r.1.].

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Environmental Sciences

Anthropoid’s Taxonomy - Biochemistry - Civil Engineering - Earth Sciences - Ecology - Entomology - Forest Sciences - Geo-Chemistry - Geodesy - Geology - Geology. - Paleontology - Geosciences - Hydraulics - Hydrobiology - Hydro-Geology - Hydrology - Hydrometallurgy - Oceanology - Pedology - Sea Sciences - Water Resources’

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Privacy Statement

The ethic statement of our journal complies with the Principles of Transparency and Best Practice in Scholarly Publishing as described by the Committee on Publication Ethics (COPE) for Journal Editors.

  1. International Standards for Authors:
  • Authors must certify that their manuscripts are their original work. Plagiarism | Duplicate | Data Fabrication and Falsification | and Redundant Publications are forbidden.
  • Authors must certify that the manuscript has not previously been published and is not currently being considered for publication elsewhere. If the authors have used the work and/or words of others | the authors must ensure that the work and/or words of others are appropriately cited or quoted and identify all sources used in the creation of their manuscripts.
  • When an author discovers a significant error or inaccuracy in his/her own published work | it is the author's obligation to promptly notify the Journal editor or publisher and cooperate with the editor to retract or correct the paper.
  • Authors must notify to “Nature & Technology Journal” of any conflicts of interest.
  1. International Standards for Editorial Board:

     The Editorial Board must:

  • Keeps information pertaining to all submitted manuscripts confidential.
  • Be responsible for making publication decisions for submitted manuscripts.
  • Strive to meet the needs of readers and authors.
  • Evaluate manuscripts only for their intellectual content.
  • Strive to constantly improve their journals.
  • Maintain the integrity of the academic record. The Editorial Board must disclose any conflicts of interest and preclude business needs from compromising intellectual and ethical standards.
  • Always be willing to publish corrections | clarifications | retractions and apologies when needed.
  • Certify that the names and email addresses entered in this journal site will be used exclusively for the stated purposes of this journal and will not be made available for any other purpose or to any other party.

    3. International Standards for Reviewers:

   Reviewers must:

  • Keeps information pertaining to the manuscript confidential.
  • Bring to the attention of the Editor Board any information that may be a reason to reject the publication of a manuscript.
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