Archaeological Research in Asia

archaeological research in asia

Subject Area and Category

  • Archeology (arts and humanities)

Elsevier B.V.

Publication type

Information.

How to publish in this journal

archaeological research in asia

The set of journals have been ranked according to their SJR and divided into four equal groups, four quartiles. Q1 (green) comprises the quarter of the journals with the highest values, Q2 (yellow) the second highest values, Q3 (orange) the third highest values and Q4 (red) the lowest values.

The SJR is a size-independent prestige indicator that ranks journals by their 'average prestige per article'. It is based on the idea that 'all citations are not created equal'. SJR is a measure of scientific influence of journals that accounts for both the number of citations received by a journal and the importance or prestige of the journals where such citations come from It measures the scientific influence of the average article in a journal, it expresses how central to the global scientific discussion an average article of the journal is.

Evolution of the number of published documents. All types of documents are considered, including citable and non citable documents.

This indicator counts the number of citations received by documents from a journal and divides them by the total number of documents published in that journal. The chart shows the evolution of the average number of times documents published in a journal in the past two, three and four years have been cited in the current year. The two years line is equivalent to journal impact factor ™ (Thomson Reuters) metric.

Evolution of the total number of citations and journal's self-citations received by a journal's published documents during the three previous years. Journal Self-citation is defined as the number of citation from a journal citing article to articles published by the same journal.

Evolution of the number of total citation per document and external citation per document (i.e. journal self-citations removed) received by a journal's published documents during the three previous years. External citations are calculated by subtracting the number of self-citations from the total number of citations received by the journal’s documents.

International Collaboration accounts for the articles that have been produced by researchers from several countries. The chart shows the ratio of a journal's documents signed by researchers from more than one country; that is including more than one country address.

Not every article in a journal is considered primary research and therefore "citable", this chart shows the ratio of a journal's articles including substantial research (research articles, conference papers and reviews) in three year windows vs. those documents other than research articles, reviews and conference papers.

Ratio of a journal's items, grouped in three years windows, that have been cited at least once vs. those not cited during the following year.

Evolution of the percentage of female authors.

Evolution of the number of documents cited by public policy documents according to Overton database.

Evoution of the number of documents related to Sustainable Development Goals defined by United Nations. Available from 2018 onwards.

Scimago Journal & Country Rank

Leave a comment

Name * Required

Email (will not be published) * Required

* Required Cancel

The users of Scimago Journal & Country Rank have the possibility to dialogue through comments linked to a specific journal. The purpose is to have a forum in which general doubts about the processes of publication in the journal, experiences and other issues derived from the publication of papers are resolved. For topics on particular articles, maintain the dialogue through the usual channels with your editor.

Scimago Lab

Follow us on @ScimagoJR Scimago Lab , Copyright 2007-2024. Data Source: Scopus®

archaeological research in asia

Cookie settings

Cookie Policy

Legal Notice

Privacy Policy

archaeological research in asia

Asian Archaeology

  • Primarily focuses on eastern Asia, mainland and island Southeast Asia, and Australia.
  • Aims to foster a better understanding of the history and cultures of Asia.
  • Strives to contribute to the development of a global approach to archaeology.
  • Targets an international readership,especially scholars and students from Europe, North America, and Asia.
  • Huiqiu Shao

Societies and partnerships

New Content Item

Latest issue

Volume 7, Issue 2

Latest articles

Ancient dna study of canid remains excavated from the houtaomuga archaeological site, northeast china.

  • Xingcheng Wang

archaeological research in asia

Archaeology and ecology of acavus snails in Sri Lanka’s semi-arid to intermediate zones: uncovering holocene microclimatic changes

  • Thilanka M. Siriwardana
  • Pramuditha P. Manusinghe

archaeological research in asia

Hunting and fishing-led economy and early civilization: the case of the Hongshan Culture in western Liaoning

archaeological research in asia

“The Northern Dipper and the Southern Dipper constellations in Koguryŏ elite tombs in northeast Asia”

  • Ariane Perrin

archaeological research in asia

The Tomb and treasury of Hülegü Khan

  • Amin Moradi

archaeological research in asia

Journal information

  • Google Scholar
  • OCLC WorldCat Discovery Service
  • TD Net Discovery Service

Rights and permissions

Springer policies

© Research Center for Chinese Frontier Archaeology (RCCFA), Jilin University and Springer Nature Singapore Pte Ltd.

  • Find a journal
  • Publish with us
  • Track your research

IMAGES

  1. The Top Archaeological Sites in China to Visit

    archaeological research in asia

  2. Major article published in Archaeological Research in Asia!

    archaeological research in asia

  3. (PDF) The Peopling of the Tibetan Plateau, a Special Issue of

    archaeological research in asia

  4. Top Ten Archaeological Discoveries in Mongolia

    archaeological research in asia

  5. East Asia

    archaeological research in asia

  6. China's New Archaeological Discoveries in 2021

    archaeological research in asia

VIDEO

  1. One-Day Workshop with Prof. Miriam Stark (Part II)

  2. 12 Most Incredible Archaeological Finds

  3. 12 Most Amazing Archaeological Finds

  4. Archaeologists stunned by ancient Persian steel discovery in desert

  5. “Asian Archaeology: Recent Discoveries and Controversies”

  6. Top Ten Archaeological Discoveries of 2023: Digging for Truth Episode 225