Journal Guides10 min readUpdated Mar 16, 2026

Annual Review of Earth and Planetary Sciences Submission Guide

How Annual Review of Earth and Planetary Sciences submissions work, including invitations, proposal strategy, manuscript scope, and editorial expectations.

By ManuSights Team

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How to approach Annual Review of Earth and Planetary Sciences

Use the submission guide like a working checklist. The goal is to make fit, package completeness, and cover-letter framing obvious before you open the portal.

Stage
What to check
1. Scope
Choose a field-scale review question
2. Package
Define the synthesis structure
3. Cover letter
Clarify the audience and payoff
4. Final check
Position against recent major reviews

This Annual Review of Earth and Planetary Sciences submission guide covers the invitation process, manuscript preparation, and editorial expectations for a high-trust geoscience review journal. Unlike standard journals, the process usually starts with an invitation or proposal conversation rather than a typical unsolicited submission.

Quick Answer: Is Annual Review of Earth and Planetary Sciences Right for Your Review?

You are usually a realistic fit only if you have real standing in the topic area and can credibly write a field-shaping synthesis across geophysics, geology, climate, ocean, or planetary science.

The journal is not looking for narrow subspecialty surveys. It wants broad reviews that pull together a mature literature and help a wide earth-and-planetary-science audience understand where the field stands and what comes next.

If you are unsure about fit, recent author lists are still the right calibration tool. The question is not whether you can summarize the literature. It is whether you are the right person to synthesize it for the field.

What Annual Review of Earth and Planetary Sciences Actually Publishes

The journal publishes only comprehensive review articles that synthesize broad areas of earth and planetary science research. Think "The State of Climate Modeling" or "Planetary Formation Mechanisms"—not "Recent Advances in Zircon Geochronology of the Western Alps."

Each review covers 15-25 years of research across multiple research groups, institutions, and methodological approaches. The editorial board expects reviews that define the current state of major subfields and project future research directions. They don't want literature surveys or opinion pieces disguised as reviews.

The scope spans geophysics, geology, atmospheric science, oceanography, planetary science, and astrobiology. But reviews must address questions that matter across multiple subdisciplines. A review on earthquake prediction mechanisms might cover seismology, rock mechanics, statistical modeling, and geodesy—bringing together research communities that don't always talk to each other.

Reviews typically include 8-15 major figures, often combining data from dozens of studies into new synthetic visualizations. The journal expects original analysis, not just compilation. You're not just summarizing what others found—you're identifying patterns, resolving contradictions, and proposing new frameworks that advance the field.

Article structure follows a standard format: introduction defining scope and importance, 3-5 major sections covering different aspects or time periods, synthesis section identifying gaps and future directions, and conclusions that propose specific research priorities. The editorial board rejects reviews that read like extended literature surveys without clear synthesis or forward-looking analysis.

The Invitation Reality: How Authors Actually Get Asked to Write Reviews

The editorial board maintains a database of potential reviewers and actively solicits articles 12-18 months before publication. They don't wait for authors to contact them—they identify gaps in coverage and approach specific experts to write reviews.

Board members attend major conferences (AGU Fall Meeting, Goldschmidt, LPSC) specifically to identify review topics and authors. They track citation patterns, monitor emerging research areas, and watch for researchers giving major conference keynotes or receiving career awards. If you're giving invited talks at multiple conferences or chairing major sessions, you're on their radar.

But you can speed up the process. Email the editor-in-chief with a one-paragraph proposal describing your review topic, why it needs comprehensive synthesis now, and your qualifications to write it. Include 3-5 recent high-impact papers you've authored on the topic. Keep it to 200 words maximum.

The most effective approach is networking with current editorial board members. They often suggest potential authors during editorial meetings. If you know board members from your research area, mention your interest in writing a review during conference conversations. Don't make a formal pitch—just express interest and let them know you'd be available if appropriate topics arise.

Self-nomination works best when you can demonstrate that your review would fill a clear gap. Point to recent major discoveries, new datasets, or emerging controversies that need synthesis. The board responds well to proposals that address timely questions where your expertise intersects with broader community needs.

The editorial board also tracks retirement patterns and succession planning. When major field leaders retire, they often commission reviews that capture decades of institutional knowledge before it's lost. If you're the logical successor to a retiring expert, position yourself as the natural choice to write the definitive review of their research area.

Submission Requirements and Manuscript Formatting

Reviews are substantial and expected to feel comprehensive. The manuscript usually needs enough space, references, figures, and synthesis to cover a mature literature without becoming a loose literature dump.

Structure your review with clear section headings and subheadings. The journal uses a standard format: Abstract (200 words), Introduction, 3-5 major content sections, Future Directions, and Conclusions. Each content section should be 1,500-2,500 words with 2-4 figures or tables.

Citations follow a specific numbered format with complete titles and page ranges for all references. The editorial office checks every citation for accuracy and formatting compliance. Missing page numbers or incomplete journal names delay publication by weeks. Use the journal's LaTeX template or Word template exactly—don't modify margins, fonts, or spacing.

Figures require special attention because Annual Review articles are heavily illustrated. Each figure needs publication-quality resolution (300 DPI minimum for photos, vector format for line graphs and diagrams). Figure captions should be self-contained with enough detail that readers understand the main point without reading the text. Plan for 6-12 figures plus 2-4 tables.

The journal expects original figure compilation, not reproduction of existing published figures. You can use data from other studies, but create new visualizations that serve your synthetic argument. Most reviews include at least 2-3 figures that combine datasets from multiple sources to show patterns not visible in individual studies.

Mathematical notation follows specific style guidelines available in the author instructions. Equations should be numbered sequentially and defined clearly. The journal avoids complex mathematical derivations—focus on key equations that illuminate physical principles rather than detailed mathematical treatments.

Color figures are encouraged when they improve clarity, but all figures must be interpretable in grayscale for readers using monochrome displays. Include scale bars on all maps and microscopy images. Label all axes clearly with units specified.

The editorial office will return manuscripts for formatting corrections before sending them for peer review. How to Avoid Desk Rejection at Science covers similar formatting requirements that apply across major scientific journals. Follow templates precisely—it signals attention to detail that editors expect from comprehensive reviews.

What Editors Want: Beyond Comprehensive Literature Coverage

Editors don't want encyclopedic literature reviews that summarize every paper ever published on your topic. They want synthetic analysis that identifies patterns, resolves contradictions, and projects future research directions.

The strongest reviews identify 3-5 major unresolved questions and trace how recent research has changed our understanding of each question. Don't just describe what different studies found—explain why apparently contradictory results actually make sense when you consider methodological differences, geographic variations, or temporal changes.

Interdisciplinary connections matter enormously. Reviews that link earth science research to atmospheric science, ecology, or planetary science get editorial priority over narrowly focused surveys. The board specifically looks for reviews that help researchers from different subfields understand each other's work.

Quantitative synthesis adds value that purely qualitative reviews can't match. Compile datasets from multiple studies, perform meta-analyses, or identify scaling relationships that weren't obvious in individual papers. The journal publishes reviews that generate new insights through data compilation, not just literature organization.

Forward-looking analysis distinguishes excellent reviews from good ones. Identify technological advances, new datasets, or methodological developments that will enable major progress over the next 5-10 years. Propose specific research questions that can be answered with emerging tools or approaches.

The editorial board particularly values reviews that influence funding priorities and research directions. Reviews get cited heavily when they identify important unanswered questions and explain why those questions matter for broader scientific or societal goals. Think beyond your immediate research community—how does your topic connect to climate change, natural hazards, or resource management?

Review Timeline and What to Expect After Submission

Invited review journals still use peer review, and the standard is high. The most common pressure points are usually:

  • whether the scope is broad enough but still coherent
  • whether the review offers synthesis rather than chronology
  • whether it identifies the real unresolved questions in the field
  • whether the forward-looking section is specific enough to influence future work

That means revisions are often structural rather than cosmetic. Editors are usually trying to make the article more useful as a field-defining review, not just cleaner as prose.

Publication timing can also be shaped by the journal's broader volume planning. That is another reason to think in terms of editorial fit and topic timing rather than expecting a simple research-journal cadence.

Most authors receive requests for minor formatting corrections during final production, typically involving figure quality, reference formatting, or caption clarity. Science Advances Submission Process: Complete Timeline & What to Expect describes similar production timelines that apply across high-impact journals.

Common Mistakes That Get Reviews Rejected

The most frequent mistake is writing literature surveys instead of synthetic reviews. Editors reject manuscripts that simply describe what different papers found without identifying patterns, resolving contradictions, or projecting future directions. Your review should generate new insights through synthesis, not just compile existing knowledge.

Scope problems cause frequent rejections. Reviews that are too narrow miss interdisciplinary connections that make topics interesting to the journal's broad readership. Reviews that are too broad lack the depth and expertise that distinguish Annual Review articles from general science magazines.

Poor organization frustrates reviewers and editors. Reviews need clear logical flow between sections, with each section building toward specific synthetic conclusions. Avoid organizing reviews chronologically—structure them around major questions or conceptual frameworks instead.

Many authors underestimate the reference requirements. Reviews with fewer than 200 citations or references concentrated in recent years get rejected for insufficient comprehensiveness. But cite strategically—don't pad reference lists with marginally relevant papers just to hit citation targets.

Weak future directions sections disappoint editors who expect reviews to influence research priorities. Don't just list "more research needed"—identify specific questions that can be answered with existing or emerging methods, and explain why those questions matter for broader scientific understanding.

ManuSights provides expert pre-submission review for high-stakes journals like Annual Review of Earth and Planetary Sciences, helping researchers strengthen synthesis, improve organization, and avoid common rejection causes before submission.

Proposal and Cover Letter Checklist

For this journal, the proposal stage matters almost as much as the manuscript itself. Before you send a pitch or final submission, make sure you can show:

  • why this topic needs a field-level review now
  • what scope boundaries you will use so the review stays coherent
  • why your author team is credible for the synthesis
  • how the manuscript will go beyond summary into real analysis and future-direction judgment

If that logic is weak in the proposal or cover letter, the manuscript starts from a worse position before anyone reads the full review.

  1. Annual Reviews submission-system instructions and proposal guidance
  2. Recent AREPS articles used to benchmark synthesis depth, structure, and editorial framing
  3. Annual Reviews materials and nearby geoscience-review venues used for fit assessment
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References

Sources

  1. 1. Annual Review of Earth and Planetary Sciences journal homepage and Annual Reviews author guidance

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