I have placed some citation needed tags where cites are needed. Done
ref #19 "Presentation to Brave Milford Fishermen", Haverfordwest & Milford Haven Telegraph, 28 February. I am a little puzzled as to why a presentation to Milford seamen would include commendations of Padstow lifeboatmen? Done I should have been clearer, it was due to the Padstow crew refusing.
But the citation comes from the Haverfordwest & Milford Haven Telegraph! Milford Haven is in West Wales, ove ninety miles away by sea. Can you post the full text of the citation here?
Good point, I've just re-read it, and I've got it wrong. will write it out below. Done Now done, they were on a passing Steam Liner.
It is broad in its coverage.
a (major aspects): b (focused):
This combined with the natural sea salt made the sand very valuable to farmers to mix into manure Why? Needs some explanation. Done Cornwall has acidic soil.
We could also do with some explanation of how a bar forms. There may be some pointers at
Sand bank#Harbour and river bars. Done I'm still not 100% Satisfied, and could probably improve that with a diagram.
However, after a series of mishaps blamed on Cruel Coppinger, Needs some explanation of who Cruel Coppinger was. Just a mention such as "the legendary wrecker Cruel Coppinger". Done
Mr. T. G. Hancock presided at the weekly concert of the John Cory Sailors' Rest and during an interval in the proceedings said he had a pleasing duty to perform in the presentation to Mr. J. Horst, Mr. F. Reynolds and Mr. W. Cook, three members of the crew of the steam liner Chanticleer, who in November last volunteered to make up a life-boat crew that went to the rescue of a fisherman who was on the wreck of the "Angele", of Brest, on the Doom Bar, Padstow, and with great difficulty and danger saved the man's life. The act was all the more meritorious because the regular crew of the Padstow Lifeboat who had only just before been out to another wreck refused to make the second journey. The bravery of these three men had been recognised by the National Lifeboat Institution who at a meeting of the Committee of Management held in London in December adopted the following resolution:-
"That the best thanks of the Royal National Lifeboat Institution be presented to Mr. J. Horst, Mr. F. Reynolds and Mr. W. Cook, for gallantly coming forward as volunteers in the Padstow No. 1 Lifeboat, and assisting to save the master of the brigantine "Angele", of Brest, which was wrecked on the Doom Bar, Padstow, in a strong W.N.W. gale and very heavy sea on the 12th November 1912."
The Chairman asked the men mentioned to come forward to the platform, and Messrs Horst and Reynolds came to the front amidst loud cheers. Mr Cook, the Chairman said, was at sea, and he would have the pleasure of handing him his certificate again.
Dunbar?
Although it's only a secondary name here, perhaps it would be worth adding an other uses link here to
Dunbar (disambiguation) or a link somewhere in the article to
Dunbar. Incidentally, that name almost certainly has no connection with sandbars as it's in an area of rocky cliffs: see the suggested Brythonic source which looks likely. . .
dave souza,
talk19:43, 24 March 2012 (UTC)reply
Surely the feature was called the Dun Bar because that describes very well what it is - a Dun (greyish-brown) Bar (bank of sand, silt. etc., across the mouth of a river or harbour, obstructing navigation). I've lifted the definitions from the SOED.
Mahonj (
talk)
07:40, 1 October 2012 (UTC)reply
Well, that's a positive start. I've redirected the beer to the brewery, which seems like the obvious place for it to be.
WormTT· (
talk)
08:15, 5 May 2012 (UTC)reply
Left aligned images at start of subsections
User:Epbr123#Style and prose checklist says "Left-aligned images should not be placed at the start of subsections". There's a few examples of this in this article currently, although most of them are only at the start of level 2 subsections and are left-aligned because the preceding images are right-aligned, and the other one is left-aligned because there's a quote taking up the right-aligned space.
I've had a bit of a fiddle, moving some images around and adding a couple more - We don't have any left-alinged images at the start of subsections and the "left/right" rule is in tact. The only problem would come if I find any more images! Let's hope I don't...
WormTT(
talk)
09:09, 8 June 2012 (UTC)reply
Oh, and I read the checklist to say that it's fine to have Left-aligned images at the start of sections, but not subsections - have I misinterpreted?
WormTT(
talk)
09:14, 8 June 2012 (UTC)reply
Yes you're right.
On a related note, the current layout generates a very large amount of whitespace when viewed at 1440x900 in Internet Explorer, not quite so bad in FireFox but still noticeable. I'm wondering if there aren't perhaps too many pictures, and the reader is left feeling that there are portions of the article that are mainly picture-driven, with the text added alongside the pictures in order to justify and explain them, rather than the other way round as it should be.
I wonder if it's worth putting the "Doom bar at low tide" picture into the infobox (a bit bigger), and not using the "Waves breaking on the Doom bar" picture at all? Although there are perhaps good reasons to have one pic at low water and one at high water, the latter image is very hard to understand without reading the caption and parts of the article first - it just looks like some water photographed from some land. The former picture is much better as it clearly shows the Doom Bar itself and instantly makes clear what it is.
Maybe we need a replacement "at high tide" pic - I'm told today is a great day for taking pictures of wind and wave in south-west England :) --
Demiurge1000 (
talk)
09:38, 8 June 2012 (UTC)reply
Would love to be down there taking photos, but I'm a good 5-6 hours away! If you think any pictures should be removed, or swapped about, please do go ahead - I'm picture happy, and that's possibly not a good thing. I've also used a few {{clear}}s, which might account for the whitespace on IE - it might be better to take them back out.
WormTT(
talk)
09:48, 8 June 2012 (UTC)reply
Helicopter rescues yacht - clarification needed
"the Padstow lifeboat and a rescue helicopter rescued two yachts in separate incidents". Now, clearly, the helicopter did not rescue the yacht - there's a video on YouTube that shows what happens when you try to tow a boat (even a small one) with a helicopter. I guess the helicopter just rescued the crew, but the lifeboat might have rescued the crew or rescued both yacht and crew. I'm reluctant to reword it myself, since I don't know which it is. Any ideas? --
Demiurge1000 (
talk)
00:12, 27 May 2012 (UTC)reply
The associated source gives a very good account of what happened that day, but doesn't mention what happened to the second yacht (the first was towed to safety after the crew and two lifeboat personel were airlifted). I've added a couple of words to confirm that it was the crews that were rescued, not they yachts.
WormTT≡talk≡11:48, 28 May 2012 (UTC)reply
I got a question about this one; I think it's going to need some work. For instance, in the lead:
"it represented a significant hazard to shipping due to the complicated route boats needed to take": due to -> owing to. I know, "due to" doesn't sound all that terrible to me either, but Garner's,
Chicago and many British style guides disagree, saying that "due to" should always modify a noun or noun phrase. What's being modified here is the whole clause, that is, it's the fact that it represented a significant hazard that is "due to" something, so "owing to" is better. If you were saying that a sand bar constituted the hazard, you could say the hazard was "due to" the sand bar, since "due to" would be modifying "hazard". - Dank (
push to talk)
17:12, 28 May 2012 (UTC)reply
While you're thinking, I've clarified that it's the entrance to Padstow. If you've got any better ideas, I'd welcome them.
WormTT(
talk)
19:00, 5 June 2012 (UTC)reply
Having re-read that a few times, I think it's fine (and probably better than the mass re-arranging I was planning to clarify it). --
Demiurge1000 (
talk)
12:56, 27 June 2012 (UTC)reply
"There have been many shipwrecks there through the centuries, and the sand bank had such a notorious reputation that vessels would risk being wrecked on the coast rather than negotiate the entrance to Padstow.": The shipwrecks are probably responsible for the reputation ... if so, then this would be tighter: "There have been many shipwrecks there through the centuries, and many more ships have risked being wrecked on the coast rather than negotiating the entrance to Padstow."
Thinking about this one - the proposed replacement sounds very wrong somehow, although the original could perhaps be trimmed a bit. --
Demiurge1000 (
talk)
19:53, 28 May 2012 (UTC)reply
Sure, there's no requirement to use my words ... suggesting something is the most compact way to point to problems. - Dank (
push to talk)
00:04, 29 May 2012 (UTC)reply
Again, have gone ahead and used the wording. Demiurge1000, if you can come up with a better solution, be my guest.
WormTT(
talk)
19:00, 5 June 2012 (UTC)reply
I've replaced the first occurrence of "many" with "numerous" to cut down repetition. I'm hoping it sounds a bit better and also still gets the sense across accurately. --
Demiurge1000 (
talk)
12:56, 27 June 2012 (UTC)reply
"A House of Commons report on the Doom Bar could not find any way to remove the danger, but safety measures included ...": Was the report directly responsible for the safety measures?
"capstans": Not getting how a capstan helps a boat or ship get past the sand bar.
I wondered the same about the bollards etc originally. However, I guess what's happening is that, this being the age of sail, a lot of shipwrecks aren't because ships run aground in a matter of minutes due to hurricane-force winds or faulty navigation. They basically drift slowly until they hit something (in this case a sandbar), and onlookers can appreciate what's going to happen for anything up to hours in advance. So there's plenty of time for a rowing boat to run a strong line from a capstan on the shore to the ship, and then the capstan can be used for motive power to gradually pull the ship in the right direction. The function of the rings and bollards are expanded upon a bit in the body of the article. --
Demiurge1000 (
talk)
19:53, 28 May 2012 (UTC)reply
Exactly right, the winds were/are temperamental there, they come from different directions due to the eddying, and can fall away all together. With no power and a quickly changing tide, boats could get beached by just floating onto the sandbank. Furthermore, in extra rough weather, there is no possibility of using an anchor to gain purchase and ride out the storm. Finally, even winds were behaving properly, sail power wasn't perfectly accurate, so the capstan was used to ensure the ship is running on the correct line.
WormTT(
talk)
19:00, 5 June 2012 (UTC)reply
"eddying winds": winds that create eddy currents, maybe?
Indeed, any fluid (including gases) can eddy, and it's the winds which are eddying, by coming over the top of the cliff and circling back on themselves.
WormTT(
talk)
19:00, 5 June 2012 (UTC)reply
"The bar formed in the 16th century, and is composed of sediment from the river and sand from the sea": The bar formed in the 16th century from river sediment and sand from the sea.
Done - we're losing a bit of the sense here (the bar didn't just form in the 16th century then sit there - like the
Ship of Theseus, the sediment and sand from the 16th century is almost certainly no longer part of the sandbar now.) But, the replacement is a great deal tidier, so happy with that. --
Demiurge1000 (
talk)
19:53, 28 May 2012 (UTC)reply
"A Cornish folklore legend has grown around the origins of the Doom Bar; that a mermaid created it as a dying curse on the harbour after she was shot by a local man.": Three problems:
"legend", "origins" and "created" are triply redundant; better would be, maybe, "In Cornish folklore, a mermaid created the Doom Bar ...".
"Has grown" suggests the story is recent, but "legend" suggests it's old. It would be better to either be specific or not hint about the age of the tale. Also, with all fiction that's relevant to history, it's best to at least give the reader a clue why the fiction is significant ... does the story for instance have "notability" of its own? Has the story somehow affected the history? - Dank (
push to talk)
17:12, 28 May 2012 (UTC)reply
Sure. These days, a few copyediting problems don't mean a quick death at FAC ... since it's already been peer reviewed, you and/or WTT can always put it up at FAC, where you'll (hopefully) get a range of opinions. - Dank (
push to talk)
23:59, 28 May 2012 (UTC)reply
How about something like "An enduring local and literary legend developed around the idea of a mermaid's involvement in the creation of the Doom Bar." ? (The alliteration is accidental rather than deliberate, and would be probably best avoided.) --
Demiurge1000 (
talk)
12:56, 27 June 2012 (UTC)reply
Some comments
I don't think there's anything fundamentally wrong with this article that would mean it would crash and burn at FAC, but there are a few things I've picked up on:
I suggest you separate out the book sources (especially those you cite more than once). You can use the style at
Iranian Embassy siege#References/
Operation Barras#References (which I find easy to use) or you can get someone to do list-defined references (sfn) for you
DoneI've played with the references as much as I can... I don't think sfn is a great idea because there is a large variety of references
Books, for example, should have author's name, title, date/year of publication, and ISBN where available. It doesn't matter whether or not you give place of publication, but be consistent.
Done
Make sure all sources are reliable
Hmmm. Difficult on that - I've pulled out any self published sources, so the biggest problem is the beer part. Will have a think.
Be consistent in the format you use for citations
Done Should be consistent now.
The section headings are a little misleading—for example, the first paragraph of the history section is about geography rather than history and the first paragraph under "Dredging" doesn't discuss dredging
Done
Provide conversions for measurements (eg tons of sand)
Done
It has accounted for over 600 beachings, wrecks and capsizings since records began early in the 19th century,[15] with about 300 being wrecks—"with" is a pretty crappy connective. See
WP:1a#Smoothly integrating ideas into a sentence
Done
and pushed the hapless vessels in the direction of the sand bank; "hapless" is a little flamboyant for an encyclopaedia
Done
What does as it would gain no purchase on the sand mean?
Done
According to one report, the Doom Bar was regarded as so dangerous that vessels would risk being wrecked on the coast in a storm, rather than negotiate the entrance to Padstow. You need to introduce Padstow before or immediately after that point
Done It's mentioned and linked in the prior section, but I've added "nearby .. harbour" to clarify.
I know "capstan" is linked in the lead, but a brief plain English explanation might be beneficial here
Not done I can't see how it would, as it would upset the flow of the text. It's explained that it's a safety feature, and later points out that it would be used for warping (again linked).
An example was the Towan, which was not in significant danger and did not need assistance. That's quite an awkward and abrupt new sentence
Done
the Life-boat Institution, a permanent lifeboat, a RNLI Silver Medal, and then in the next paragraph, the
Royal National Lifeboat Institution.
Done
Are there any other notable shipwrecks on the Doom Bar?
Done No - there's no other notable ships which were wrecked there. I'm hoping to write a
List of wrecks on Doom Bar article when I've finished with this one.
so a miner by the name of Pope was called in is one of those unusual phrases that don't match the surrounding text which make me suspicious; the sentence could also be easily incorporated into the next one
DoneThat's what happens when you write an article in bits over the course of 4-5 years. Yes, that's awkward and I've sorted it.
Watch out for overlinking—linking a term more than once outside the lead is frowned upon at FAC
I have placed some citation needed tags where cites are needed. Done
ref #19 "Presentation to Brave Milford Fishermen", Haverfordwest & Milford Haven Telegraph, 28 February. I am a little puzzled as to why a presentation to Milford seamen would include commendations of Padstow lifeboatmen? Done I should have been clearer, it was due to the Padstow crew refusing.
But the citation comes from the Haverfordwest & Milford Haven Telegraph! Milford Haven is in West Wales, ove ninety miles away by sea. Can you post the full text of the citation here?
Good point, I've just re-read it, and I've got it wrong. will write it out below. Done Now done, they were on a passing Steam Liner.
It is broad in its coverage.
a (major aspects): b (focused):
This combined with the natural sea salt made the sand very valuable to farmers to mix into manure Why? Needs some explanation. Done Cornwall has acidic soil.
We could also do with some explanation of how a bar forms. There may be some pointers at
Sand bank#Harbour and river bars. Done I'm still not 100% Satisfied, and could probably improve that with a diagram.
However, after a series of mishaps blamed on Cruel Coppinger, Needs some explanation of who Cruel Coppinger was. Just a mention such as "the legendary wrecker Cruel Coppinger". Done
Mr. T. G. Hancock presided at the weekly concert of the John Cory Sailors' Rest and during an interval in the proceedings said he had a pleasing duty to perform in the presentation to Mr. J. Horst, Mr. F. Reynolds and Mr. W. Cook, three members of the crew of the steam liner Chanticleer, who in November last volunteered to make up a life-boat crew that went to the rescue of a fisherman who was on the wreck of the "Angele", of Brest, on the Doom Bar, Padstow, and with great difficulty and danger saved the man's life. The act was all the more meritorious because the regular crew of the Padstow Lifeboat who had only just before been out to another wreck refused to make the second journey. The bravery of these three men had been recognised by the National Lifeboat Institution who at a meeting of the Committee of Management held in London in December adopted the following resolution:-
"That the best thanks of the Royal National Lifeboat Institution be presented to Mr. J. Horst, Mr. F. Reynolds and Mr. W. Cook, for gallantly coming forward as volunteers in the Padstow No. 1 Lifeboat, and assisting to save the master of the brigantine "Angele", of Brest, which was wrecked on the Doom Bar, Padstow, in a strong W.N.W. gale and very heavy sea on the 12th November 1912."
The Chairman asked the men mentioned to come forward to the platform, and Messrs Horst and Reynolds came to the front amidst loud cheers. Mr Cook, the Chairman said, was at sea, and he would have the pleasure of handing him his certificate again.
Dunbar?
Although it's only a secondary name here, perhaps it would be worth adding an other uses link here to
Dunbar (disambiguation) or a link somewhere in the article to
Dunbar. Incidentally, that name almost certainly has no connection with sandbars as it's in an area of rocky cliffs: see the suggested Brythonic source which looks likely. . .
dave souza,
talk19:43, 24 March 2012 (UTC)reply
Surely the feature was called the Dun Bar because that describes very well what it is - a Dun (greyish-brown) Bar (bank of sand, silt. etc., across the mouth of a river or harbour, obstructing navigation). I've lifted the definitions from the SOED.
Mahonj (
talk)
07:40, 1 October 2012 (UTC)reply
Well, that's a positive start. I've redirected the beer to the brewery, which seems like the obvious place for it to be.
WormTT· (
talk)
08:15, 5 May 2012 (UTC)reply
Left aligned images at start of subsections
User:Epbr123#Style and prose checklist says "Left-aligned images should not be placed at the start of subsections". There's a few examples of this in this article currently, although most of them are only at the start of level 2 subsections and are left-aligned because the preceding images are right-aligned, and the other one is left-aligned because there's a quote taking up the right-aligned space.
I've had a bit of a fiddle, moving some images around and adding a couple more - We don't have any left-alinged images at the start of subsections and the "left/right" rule is in tact. The only problem would come if I find any more images! Let's hope I don't...
WormTT(
talk)
09:09, 8 June 2012 (UTC)reply
Oh, and I read the checklist to say that it's fine to have Left-aligned images at the start of sections, but not subsections - have I misinterpreted?
WormTT(
talk)
09:14, 8 June 2012 (UTC)reply
Yes you're right.
On a related note, the current layout generates a very large amount of whitespace when viewed at 1440x900 in Internet Explorer, not quite so bad in FireFox but still noticeable. I'm wondering if there aren't perhaps too many pictures, and the reader is left feeling that there are portions of the article that are mainly picture-driven, with the text added alongside the pictures in order to justify and explain them, rather than the other way round as it should be.
I wonder if it's worth putting the "Doom bar at low tide" picture into the infobox (a bit bigger), and not using the "Waves breaking on the Doom bar" picture at all? Although there are perhaps good reasons to have one pic at low water and one at high water, the latter image is very hard to understand without reading the caption and parts of the article first - it just looks like some water photographed from some land. The former picture is much better as it clearly shows the Doom Bar itself and instantly makes clear what it is.
Maybe we need a replacement "at high tide" pic - I'm told today is a great day for taking pictures of wind and wave in south-west England :) --
Demiurge1000 (
talk)
09:38, 8 June 2012 (UTC)reply
Would love to be down there taking photos, but I'm a good 5-6 hours away! If you think any pictures should be removed, or swapped about, please do go ahead - I'm picture happy, and that's possibly not a good thing. I've also used a few {{clear}}s, which might account for the whitespace on IE - it might be better to take them back out.
WormTT(
talk)
09:48, 8 June 2012 (UTC)reply
Helicopter rescues yacht - clarification needed
"the Padstow lifeboat and a rescue helicopter rescued two yachts in separate incidents". Now, clearly, the helicopter did not rescue the yacht - there's a video on YouTube that shows what happens when you try to tow a boat (even a small one) with a helicopter. I guess the helicopter just rescued the crew, but the lifeboat might have rescued the crew or rescued both yacht and crew. I'm reluctant to reword it myself, since I don't know which it is. Any ideas? --
Demiurge1000 (
talk)
00:12, 27 May 2012 (UTC)reply
The associated source gives a very good account of what happened that day, but doesn't mention what happened to the second yacht (the first was towed to safety after the crew and two lifeboat personel were airlifted). I've added a couple of words to confirm that it was the crews that were rescued, not they yachts.
WormTT≡talk≡11:48, 28 May 2012 (UTC)reply
I got a question about this one; I think it's going to need some work. For instance, in the lead:
"it represented a significant hazard to shipping due to the complicated route boats needed to take": due to -> owing to. I know, "due to" doesn't sound all that terrible to me either, but Garner's,
Chicago and many British style guides disagree, saying that "due to" should always modify a noun or noun phrase. What's being modified here is the whole clause, that is, it's the fact that it represented a significant hazard that is "due to" something, so "owing to" is better. If you were saying that a sand bar constituted the hazard, you could say the hazard was "due to" the sand bar, since "due to" would be modifying "hazard". - Dank (
push to talk)
17:12, 28 May 2012 (UTC)reply
While you're thinking, I've clarified that it's the entrance to Padstow. If you've got any better ideas, I'd welcome them.
WormTT(
talk)
19:00, 5 June 2012 (UTC)reply
Having re-read that a few times, I think it's fine (and probably better than the mass re-arranging I was planning to clarify it). --
Demiurge1000 (
talk)
12:56, 27 June 2012 (UTC)reply
"There have been many shipwrecks there through the centuries, and the sand bank had such a notorious reputation that vessels would risk being wrecked on the coast rather than negotiate the entrance to Padstow.": The shipwrecks are probably responsible for the reputation ... if so, then this would be tighter: "There have been many shipwrecks there through the centuries, and many more ships have risked being wrecked on the coast rather than negotiating the entrance to Padstow."
Thinking about this one - the proposed replacement sounds very wrong somehow, although the original could perhaps be trimmed a bit. --
Demiurge1000 (
talk)
19:53, 28 May 2012 (UTC)reply
Sure, there's no requirement to use my words ... suggesting something is the most compact way to point to problems. - Dank (
push to talk)
00:04, 29 May 2012 (UTC)reply
Again, have gone ahead and used the wording. Demiurge1000, if you can come up with a better solution, be my guest.
WormTT(
talk)
19:00, 5 June 2012 (UTC)reply
I've replaced the first occurrence of "many" with "numerous" to cut down repetition. I'm hoping it sounds a bit better and also still gets the sense across accurately. --
Demiurge1000 (
talk)
12:56, 27 June 2012 (UTC)reply
"A House of Commons report on the Doom Bar could not find any way to remove the danger, but safety measures included ...": Was the report directly responsible for the safety measures?
"capstans": Not getting how a capstan helps a boat or ship get past the sand bar.
I wondered the same about the bollards etc originally. However, I guess what's happening is that, this being the age of sail, a lot of shipwrecks aren't because ships run aground in a matter of minutes due to hurricane-force winds or faulty navigation. They basically drift slowly until they hit something (in this case a sandbar), and onlookers can appreciate what's going to happen for anything up to hours in advance. So there's plenty of time for a rowing boat to run a strong line from a capstan on the shore to the ship, and then the capstan can be used for motive power to gradually pull the ship in the right direction. The function of the rings and bollards are expanded upon a bit in the body of the article. --
Demiurge1000 (
talk)
19:53, 28 May 2012 (UTC)reply
Exactly right, the winds were/are temperamental there, they come from different directions due to the eddying, and can fall away all together. With no power and a quickly changing tide, boats could get beached by just floating onto the sandbank. Furthermore, in extra rough weather, there is no possibility of using an anchor to gain purchase and ride out the storm. Finally, even winds were behaving properly, sail power wasn't perfectly accurate, so the capstan was used to ensure the ship is running on the correct line.
WormTT(
talk)
19:00, 5 June 2012 (UTC)reply
"eddying winds": winds that create eddy currents, maybe?
Indeed, any fluid (including gases) can eddy, and it's the winds which are eddying, by coming over the top of the cliff and circling back on themselves.
WormTT(
talk)
19:00, 5 June 2012 (UTC)reply
"The bar formed in the 16th century, and is composed of sediment from the river and sand from the sea": The bar formed in the 16th century from river sediment and sand from the sea.
Done - we're losing a bit of the sense here (the bar didn't just form in the 16th century then sit there - like the
Ship of Theseus, the sediment and sand from the 16th century is almost certainly no longer part of the sandbar now.) But, the replacement is a great deal tidier, so happy with that. --
Demiurge1000 (
talk)
19:53, 28 May 2012 (UTC)reply
"A Cornish folklore legend has grown around the origins of the Doom Bar; that a mermaid created it as a dying curse on the harbour after she was shot by a local man.": Three problems:
"legend", "origins" and "created" are triply redundant; better would be, maybe, "In Cornish folklore, a mermaid created the Doom Bar ...".
"Has grown" suggests the story is recent, but "legend" suggests it's old. It would be better to either be specific or not hint about the age of the tale. Also, with all fiction that's relevant to history, it's best to at least give the reader a clue why the fiction is significant ... does the story for instance have "notability" of its own? Has the story somehow affected the history? - Dank (
push to talk)
17:12, 28 May 2012 (UTC)reply
Sure. These days, a few copyediting problems don't mean a quick death at FAC ... since it's already been peer reviewed, you and/or WTT can always put it up at FAC, where you'll (hopefully) get a range of opinions. - Dank (
push to talk)
23:59, 28 May 2012 (UTC)reply
How about something like "An enduring local and literary legend developed around the idea of a mermaid's involvement in the creation of the Doom Bar." ? (The alliteration is accidental rather than deliberate, and would be probably best avoided.) --
Demiurge1000 (
talk)
12:56, 27 June 2012 (UTC)reply
Some comments
I don't think there's anything fundamentally wrong with this article that would mean it would crash and burn at FAC, but there are a few things I've picked up on:
I suggest you separate out the book sources (especially those you cite more than once). You can use the style at
Iranian Embassy siege#References/
Operation Barras#References (which I find easy to use) or you can get someone to do list-defined references (sfn) for you
DoneI've played with the references as much as I can... I don't think sfn is a great idea because there is a large variety of references
Books, for example, should have author's name, title, date/year of publication, and ISBN where available. It doesn't matter whether or not you give place of publication, but be consistent.
Done
Make sure all sources are reliable
Hmmm. Difficult on that - I've pulled out any self published sources, so the biggest problem is the beer part. Will have a think.
Be consistent in the format you use for citations
Done Should be consistent now.
The section headings are a little misleading—for example, the first paragraph of the history section is about geography rather than history and the first paragraph under "Dredging" doesn't discuss dredging
Done
Provide conversions for measurements (eg tons of sand)
Done
It has accounted for over 600 beachings, wrecks and capsizings since records began early in the 19th century,[15] with about 300 being wrecks—"with" is a pretty crappy connective. See
WP:1a#Smoothly integrating ideas into a sentence
Done
and pushed the hapless vessels in the direction of the sand bank; "hapless" is a little flamboyant for an encyclopaedia
Done
What does as it would gain no purchase on the sand mean?
Done
According to one report, the Doom Bar was regarded as so dangerous that vessels would risk being wrecked on the coast in a storm, rather than negotiate the entrance to Padstow. You need to introduce Padstow before or immediately after that point
Done It's mentioned and linked in the prior section, but I've added "nearby .. harbour" to clarify.
I know "capstan" is linked in the lead, but a brief plain English explanation might be beneficial here
Not done I can't see how it would, as it would upset the flow of the text. It's explained that it's a safety feature, and later points out that it would be used for warping (again linked).
An example was the Towan, which was not in significant danger and did not need assistance. That's quite an awkward and abrupt new sentence
Done
the Life-boat Institution, a permanent lifeboat, a RNLI Silver Medal, and then in the next paragraph, the
Royal National Lifeboat Institution.
Done
Are there any other notable shipwrecks on the Doom Bar?
Done No - there's no other notable ships which were wrecked there. I'm hoping to write a
List of wrecks on Doom Bar article when I've finished with this one.
so a miner by the name of Pope was called in is one of those unusual phrases that don't match the surrounding text which make me suspicious; the sentence could also be easily incorporated into the next one
DoneThat's what happens when you write an article in bits over the course of 4-5 years. Yes, that's awkward and I've sorted it.
Watch out for overlinking—linking a term more than once outside the lead is frowned upon at FAC