Fri, Aug 16, 2013
Polar Research journal ranked as one of the best online resources on climate change

According to a poll conducted by the website Environmentalsciencedegree.com, Norwegian Polar Institute's electronic journal Polar Research was ranked in the top class among the world's best online resources on climate change.
Polar Research has been publishing international scientific research on
the polar regions since 1982. Norwegian Polar Institute publishes the
journal via Co-Action Publishing in Stockholm. The editor-in-chief is Helle V. Goldman, and the journal has an
international panel of subject editors and editorial support from a
panel of experts from all over the world.
Polar Research has been an Open Access journal since 2011, giving readers around the world free access to the latest scientific, peer-reviewed articles on the Arctic and Antarctica across disciplines and national borders. The journal has readers from 146 countries and more than 100,000 downloads annually.
The journal can also be found on Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn.
Polar Research has been an Open Access journal since 2011, giving readers around the world free access to the latest scientific, peer-reviewed articles on the Arctic and Antarctica across disciplines and national borders. The journal has readers from 146 countries and more than 100,000 downloads annually.
The journal can also be found on Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn.