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Hello Bazonka, Thanks for your enthusiastic past edits to this page and for pointing out not to use wiki as reference, which I do appreciate, as had not realised that out until then. I have only regularly been editing wiki since early this month, so oops! will have a few to fix. I have since referenced all statements correctly and removed the reference notice.
Fair enough, that you felt you needed to move the border material, however the article is about the 26th parallel south and I did not neccesarily, look at this as Australia as being more important as you stated,
"(Reorder (the whole world is more important than Australia)"
... however I did feel that it was something quite unique and interesting about 26th parallel south, and on topic.
I just wonder if all other parallels and meridians are structured with a similar table at the top and policed? Will have to get around to taking a look at some others to see if any other country is more important than the world - not enough time in the day.
As it stands I hope people will not miss it but with the TOC at least it shows up there, so no worries? KHS-Boab 17:26, 28 January 2012 (UTC)
Regarding the dispute comments you wrote...
"The US/Canada border west of Lake of the Woods is probably longer" disputed
Is the US/Canada border the longest straight border in the world?
The title I put does have a question mark to pose the question. --Longest straight border in the world?-- The Western Australian border is defined by the 129th meridian east and if taken literally, it is the longest straight border in the world, however at the point at which 129° east meets 26° south, the border takes a turn at what has become known as Surveyor Generals Corner. [1]
It is just mean't to be an interesting (now) referenced snippet. So is that a straight down the line border? Hopefully you will see fit to remove the dispute tag.
Cheers and thanks again KHS-Boab 17:26, 28 January 2012 (UTC)
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This article is rated Start-class on Wikipedia's
content assessment scale. It is of interest to the following WikiProjects: | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Hello Bazonka, Thanks for your enthusiastic past edits to this page and for pointing out not to use wiki as reference, which I do appreciate, as had not realised that out until then. I have only regularly been editing wiki since early this month, so oops! will have a few to fix. I have since referenced all statements correctly and removed the reference notice.
Fair enough, that you felt you needed to move the border material, however the article is about the 26th parallel south and I did not neccesarily, look at this as Australia as being more important as you stated,
"(Reorder (the whole world is more important than Australia)"
... however I did feel that it was something quite unique and interesting about 26th parallel south, and on topic.
I just wonder if all other parallels and meridians are structured with a similar table at the top and policed? Will have to get around to taking a look at some others to see if any other country is more important than the world - not enough time in the day.
As it stands I hope people will not miss it but with the TOC at least it shows up there, so no worries? KHS-Boab 17:26, 28 January 2012 (UTC)
Regarding the dispute comments you wrote...
"The US/Canada border west of Lake of the Woods is probably longer" disputed
Is the US/Canada border the longest straight border in the world?
The title I put does have a question mark to pose the question. --Longest straight border in the world?-- The Western Australian border is defined by the 129th meridian east and if taken literally, it is the longest straight border in the world, however at the point at which 129° east meets 26° south, the border takes a turn at what has become known as Surveyor Generals Corner. [1]
It is just mean't to be an interesting (now) referenced snippet. So is that a straight down the line border? Hopefully you will see fit to remove the dispute tag.
Cheers and thanks again KHS-Boab 17:26, 28 January 2012 (UTC)
{{
cite conference}}
: |access-date=
requires |url=
(
help); Unknown parameter |Publish Date=
ignored (
help); Unknown parameter |month=
ignored (
help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (
link)