— Wikipedian ♀ — | |
Name | Lorri Brown |
---|---|
Country | USA & Canada |
Current location | Canada |
Time zone | PDT |
Family and friends | |
Marital status | Married |
Education and employment | |
Occupation | Retired |
Contact info | |
lorri.brown.2019gmail.com |
Greetings,
My disclosure is as follows:
My participation in Wikipedia is as a volunteer editor. I am NOT a paid editor and I DO NOT solicit being paid for creating articles. I have a COI with the article Kent Tate, the Canadian Visual Artist/Filmmaker, as a family member. I've been indirectly involved in the arts for many years. I am currently active with this interest. I am retired. My primary interest in Wikipedia has been to create Living Person Biographies for Canadian Visual Artists and Filmmakers. I've created the following new articles that I've either submitted to AfC (Articles for Creations) for review or have posted directly to the Wikipedia main space directly. I am a member of the Women in Red project and have found many subjects listed there. My goal is to create or contribute to well researched, accurate and respectful articles for Canadian artists:
Additionally, I've created and/or contributed to the following film festival and film awards pages:
Thank you, LorriBrown ( talk) 14:20, 27 May 2020 (UTC)
Today's motto...
→
We find the defendants incredibly guilty.
Wikipedia:WikiProject Articles for creation/Grading scheme
John Rocque's maps of London were published in 1746. A French-born British surveyor and cartographer,
John Rocque produced two maps of
London and the surrounding area. The better known of these, depicted here, is a 24-sheet map of the
City of London and the surrounding area, surveyed by Rocque and engraved by
John Pine and titled A Plan of the Cities of London and Westminster, and Borough of Southwark. Rocque combined two surveying techniques: he made a ground-level survey with a compass and a physical metal chain – the unit of length also being the
chain.
Compass bearings were taken of the lines measured. He also created a
triangulation network over the entire area to be covered by taking readings from church towers and similar high places using a
theodolite made by
Jonathan Sisson (the inventor of the telescopic-sighted theodolite) to measure the observed angle between two other prominent locations. The process was repeated from point to point. This image depicts all 24 sheets of Rocque's map.Map credit:
John Rocque and
John Pine
|
— Wikipedian ♀ — | |
Name | Lorri Brown |
---|---|
Country | USA & Canada |
Current location | Canada |
Time zone | PDT |
Family and friends | |
Marital status | Married |
Education and employment | |
Occupation | Retired |
Contact info | |
lorri.brown.2019gmail.com |
Greetings,
My disclosure is as follows:
My participation in Wikipedia is as a volunteer editor. I am NOT a paid editor and I DO NOT solicit being paid for creating articles. I have a COI with the article Kent Tate, the Canadian Visual Artist/Filmmaker, as a family member. I've been indirectly involved in the arts for many years. I am currently active with this interest. I am retired. My primary interest in Wikipedia has been to create Living Person Biographies for Canadian Visual Artists and Filmmakers. I've created the following new articles that I've either submitted to AfC (Articles for Creations) for review or have posted directly to the Wikipedia main space directly. I am a member of the Women in Red project and have found many subjects listed there. My goal is to create or contribute to well researched, accurate and respectful articles for Canadian artists:
Additionally, I've created and/or contributed to the following film festival and film awards pages:
Thank you, LorriBrown ( talk) 14:20, 27 May 2020 (UTC)
Today's motto...
→
We find the defendants incredibly guilty.
Wikipedia:WikiProject Articles for creation/Grading scheme
John Rocque's maps of London were published in 1746. A French-born British surveyor and cartographer,
John Rocque produced two maps of
London and the surrounding area. The better known of these, depicted here, is a 24-sheet map of the
City of London and the surrounding area, surveyed by Rocque and engraved by
John Pine and titled A Plan of the Cities of London and Westminster, and Borough of Southwark. Rocque combined two surveying techniques: he made a ground-level survey with a compass and a physical metal chain – the unit of length also being the
chain.
Compass bearings were taken of the lines measured. He also created a
triangulation network over the entire area to be covered by taking readings from church towers and similar high places using a
theodolite made by
Jonathan Sisson (the inventor of the telescopic-sighted theodolite) to measure the observed angle between two other prominent locations. The process was repeated from point to point. This image depicts all 24 sheets of Rocque's map.Map credit:
John Rocque and
John Pine
|