User talk:Look2See1/Archive 6

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May 2014

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  • [[File:Carleton Watkins (American - The Bullion Mine, Virginia City, Nevada - Google Art Project.jpg|thumb|400px|The Bullion

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  • Pine (''Pinus monophylla'')]] and [Juniperus osteosperma|Utah Juniper (''Juniperus osteosperma'')]]. <!---as the generally southwest-northeast range has unusual mostly [[acidic]] [[soil]]s — most of

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  • [[Category:Lists of landforms of California|Lakes]]]

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  • The '''Saguaro''' ({{IPAc-en|s|ə|ˈ|w|ɑr|oʊ}}, with the scientific name '''''Carnegiea gigantea''''', is an arborescent

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  • *http://la.curbed.com/tags/allen-siple LA Curbed: residences by Allen Siple]

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Parent category membership

This is just to let you know that I've cleaned up Category:United States nature-related lists and Category:California nature-related lists to remove pages that are already members of those categories' subcategories. You may be interested to read WP:SUBCAT, which informs us that "A page or category should rarely be placed in both a category and a subcategory or parent category (supercategory) of that category[...]". Thanks for all your hard work and happy editing! Ibadibam (talk) 00:24, 3 June 2014 (UTC)

The Signpost: 04 June 2014

Category:Flora of Madeira

Hi, Look2See1. I reverted your edits to Category:Flora of Madeira. The World Geographical Scheme for Recording Plant Distributions, which we are rolling out in the flora categories here, does not place regions -- islands or other subgeographic units -- as subcategories of their political affiliations but rather categorizes by biogeography. This is why Category:Flora of Madeira is only under Category:Flora of Macaronesia and not a subcategory of Category:Flora of Portugal. The flora of these places can be quite different and the category hierarchy doesn't make sense if political affiliations are the driving force behind the hierarchy. If you can't find the pdf of the WGSRPD, take a look at WP:PLANTS/WGSRPD for the layout I'm working with. Note that not all of those red-linked categories will or should be created given our own guidelines of WP:SMALLCAT, for example. Cheers, Rkitko (talk) 02:59, 7 June 2014 (UTC)

@Look2See1:. Hi, again! I could really use your help in sorting out the category hierarchy and aligning it with the World Geographical Scheme for Recording Plant Distributions that I mentioned earlier. Unfortunately, I just had to revert a good number of your edits as they served to undermine the strict hierarchy of the WGSRPD. For example, many of the United States categories (Eastern, Northern, Southern, desert, Rocky Mountains, etc.) don't exist and just serve to create overlapping chaos with the well-circumscribed categories (Northeastern, Northwestern, Southeastern, Southwestern, North-Central, South-Central). We need to stick to the WGSRPD and avoid overcategorization. I'll again point you to WP:PLANTS/WGSRPD for information and some proposals. I spent the better part of today cleaning up the African categories and, for the most part, they now follow the WGSRPD. A few categories need to be upmerged and deleted which will take more time. I will spend a little time tomorrow going over the North American categories, adding WGSRPD maps and depopulating non-WGSRPD categories. I do hope you can help! I'm not sure if I can remember if you've ever responded to a message I've left you, but it would be nice if you could so that we can discuss this implementation and so that I know you received the message and can ask any questions or raise concerns you may have.
Also, I noticed some odd categorization choices you made and I just wanted to point out a pattern that suggested you didn't understand categorization. For example, you added {{cl|Flora of the Northern United States]] to the article Northern United States. The latter is an article on a region, not a plant. Other times you have categorized articles on ecoregions, forest biomes, and ecosystems in plant categories. The main topic of these articles is not a single plant species and they don't belong in the flora categories. Just thought I'd point that out.
Please do respond. Thank you, Rkitko (talk) 05:18, 8 June 2014 (UTC)

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June 2014

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  • the reservoir level was lowered 40% due to danger from the Elsinore Fault Zone|Elsinore Fault Zone]] running beneath the dam.<ref name="ranchistory"/>

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  • American]]s, U.S. citizens of Japanese ancestry and most born in the U.S. for |forced internment]]. The people were housed in [[horse stable]] stalls, grandstands, or in 170 [[barracks]] quickly

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  • The Clapper rail and its subspecies are found along the [[Atlantic Ocean]] and Pacific Ocean]] coasts and several inland locales of the [[Americas]].

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  • River National Wildlife Refuge]] protects the lower course of the [[Bill Williams River]], to its [[mouth at [[Lake Havasu]] reservoir, in western [[Arizona]]. <ref>[http://www.fws.gov/refuge/bill_

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  • do?contractCode=NRSO&parkId=71583 Recreation.gov: Mono Hot Springs, campground]
  • search=site&contractCode=NRSO&parkId=71583 Recreation.gov: Mono Hot Springs, campground map]

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  • [[Category:1952 health disasters]

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  • section is a hiking route along San Francisquito Creek (Santa Clara River)|San Francisquito Creek]], passing through the historic [[St. Francis Dam]] site and ruins.

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  • demolished in 1972. <ref>[http://www.ridgeroute.com/lebec.htm Ridge Route.com: The Lebec Hotel]] . with images.</ref>

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  • as a trail and wagon road connecting [[Kansas City, Missouri|Kansas City]] in Missouri Territory]] to Santa Fe, still within México.<ref name="villageprofile.com">{{cite web|url=http://www.

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  • *http://www.aux.umass.edu/campuscenter/ Official '''Murray D. Lincoln Campus Center''' website]
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  • out of adobe bricks, and owned by the chief of the Olompoli tribe Aurelio, who was the father of [[Camilo Ynitia|Camillo Ynitia]. Camillo was known as the last Hoipu (Headman) of the Miwok

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  • ''Arctostaphylos purissima'' is a [[shrub]] reaching at least {{convert|1|m|ft}] in height, and known to exceed {{convert|4|m|ft}] tall. It varies in shape from low and spreading to tall and erect.

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Operation Shingle

I've asked repeatedly for an explanation. You seem to want to edit-war. Chris Troutman (talk) 21:03, 21 August 2014 (UTC)

I have repeatedly explained in edit notes, with "commons continuity" thoughts. However you have not explained your repeated reverting edits to my initial edit yet, and so hope you do not aim to edit-war by bullying along, please don't. Instead of trying to explain your issues, and understand mine.
In the redirect I have Categories for the Jan. day/week of Operation Shingle's landing linked, not just the whole Jan-May Battle of Anzio operation, for those navigating from wikimedia that only uses Cat:Operation Shingle for all 5 months of battle. The wikipedia articles & categories do not align with the Commons categories, and instead of needless renaming hassles, having a simple wikipedia Redirect fill in the missing terms is efficient. Thank you—Look2See1 t a l k → 07:37, 26 August 2014 (UTC)
Ok. Why does it matter if Commons categories match en-wp categories? Do you have a guideline to point to in this regard? I don't see the utility in what you're describing. Chris Troutman (talk) 07:44, 26 August 2014 (UTC)

Indigenous peoples hierarchies!!!

I've just fixed, or tried to, your addition of Category:History of indigenous peoples of the Pacific Northwest, which you added to PARENT categories, as if were not a subcat of them; it's taken me all evening to untangle them...I shudder to think what else you've done in the rest of the North American indigenous category hierarchy. Here's an idea, instead of playing games with the category hierarchy, which has stood for years quite organized, why don't you actually improve the articles instead? Lord knows that's what I would have spent the last four hours doing if not cleaning up the mess left by your activities. Seriously. This isn't anti-AGF, it's asking you to stop as you clearly don't know what you're doing. You also made categories intended for individuals parents of the ethnic group categories, which is not just getting things backwards, it's completely tieing certain subcat relationships into knots.Skookum1 (talk) 15:14, 7 August 2014 (UTC)

Hi Skookum, please back off. There was no play. I carefully read the articles, and cleaned up categories to be consistent per their information. You appear to know much about the subject, why haven't you already, or don't you now, improve and clarify the articles for all readers' benefits? The distinctions are not clear as written even if it "has stood for years quite organized" in your esoteric mind. Some of "your" articles and categories contradict one another! Your system does not make sense sometimes, and that's where I carefully edited to fix it. If you are one of the expert editors on this, fix the contradictions finally. Perhaps begin with Category:History of indigenous peoples of the Pacific Northwest, it has been confusing to me for years, and the articles under it have yet to improve. "You clearly don't know what you're doing" in making comprehension accessible to the general reader—so far. I have faith in you. The topics are very important and deserve your best.—Look2See1 t a l k → 07:54, 26 August 2014 (UTC)

Japanese archipelago

Hello. I appreciate some of your edits to Ryūkyūan articles and categories, however I've removed Category:Japanese archipelago from them. These correctly belong in Category:Archipelagoes of Japan because they are controlled by the state of Japan. Geographically, the Ryūkyū Islands are not a part of the Japanese archipelago; same as Sakhalin Island and the Kuril Islands. While the Philippines, Indonesia, and even the Aleutian Islands were once "archipelagoes of Japan", they were never a part of the Japanese archipelago. Also, please read History of the Ryukyu Islands and Ryūkyū Kingdom for a background on the archipelago before it politically became part of Japan. ミーラー強斗武 (StG88ぬ会話) 03:22, 28 July 2014 (UTC)


Thank you Sturmgewehr, for pointing out my misunderstandings about the Ryūkyū Islands, and their not being geographically part of the Category:Japanese archipelago.—Look2See1 t a l k → 08:00, 26 August 2014 (UTC)

August 2014

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  • park protects {{convert|2013.1|acre|ha|sing=on}} of [[dune]]s, [[estuary|estuaries]] in wetland]]s and brackish ponds, and beaches. It was established in 1975. It is adjacent to the city of [[

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Deir el-Muḥarraq

I added some photographs of the Deir el-Muḥarraq at Commons. --RolandUnger (talk) 18:36, 30 August 2014 (UTC)

The Signpost: 27 August 2014

Flora categories

Hi, Look2See1. Please note that the categories on plant distributions should follow the World Geographical Scheme for Recording Plant Distributions. See WP:PLANTS/WGSRPD for more info. I have gone about restructuring the hierarchy for most continents but have yet to nominate several categories for upmerging -- those that are not used by the WGSRPD. It's important we follow this hierarchy as there are editors who would like to see all of these categories deleted and constantly nominate fauna categories (mostly in Europe) for deletion. At least the flora categories have a published hierarchy used by other websites like GRIN. Thanks, Rkitko (talk) 00:32, 26 August 2014 (UTC)


Hi Rkitko, the World Geographical Scheme for Recording Plant Distributions Categories is excellent for some uses of course, however it's hierarchy is illogical and appears capricious for the United States, by using political geographic boundaries for "subcategories" while ignoring the political geographic boundaries of "parentcats". It is bizarre that Cat:Flora of the Eastern U.S. can go under Cat:Flora of the U.S., but neither Cat:Flora of the Northastern U.S. or Cat:Flora of the Southeastern U.S. can -- either under Cat:Flora U.S. or Cat:Flora Eastern U.S.?? Having to go to Cat:Flora of North America for some of U.S. "subcategories", but not all "subcategories" is irregular -- and obtuse for use as a botanist. The World Geographical Scheme situation is also hopeless for average (American) users, and its esoteric irrationality smothers curiosity and initiative with rigid dogma and logical access success denied. Eg: My finally finding Cat:Flora of the Calif Desert, Not in Cat:Flora of Calif, Not in Cat:Flora of Southwest U.S., Not in Cat:Flora of Western U.S., Not in Cat:Flora of U.S. —— but way out the parent cat highway in Cat:Flora of North America illustrates how ridiculous the "rigid dogma and logical access" has become. Cat:Calif Desert is with Cat:Greenland and Cat:The Caribbean, instead of any cat within ~300 miles of its geographic location. That is why I have been reverting them today, the WGSRPD is failing in actual real life use for large countries, complex floristic divisions, and/or world renowned bio-hotspots.
The World Geographical Scheme ignores Floristic Provinces, lumping all California together as a political unit defined in 1850, not the actual phytogeographic reality independent of American expansionism. 70% of the state is in the California Floristic Province, a world biodiversity hotspot. A bit of the northeast/east is in the Great Basin Province, and all SoCal eastern desert rain shadow areas are in the Sonoran Province. Yet the World Geographical Scheme apparently only allowed the 1850 political unit -- what natural science developments in the 160 years since is that honoring ? or hindering ?
Learning from the recently destroyed subcategories, often with local endemics, I wish you had converted them to Cat:Natural history of ___. eg: Cat:Natural history of Calif chaparral, Cat:NH of Transverse Ranges, Cat:NH of Channel Islands of Calif., Cat:NH of San Francisco Bay Area, etc. and not upmerged them to a duplicative generality. So much research was destroyed in an instant, and was very disrespectful to myself and other editors. You inadvertently caused a high volume of OVERCATs, auto-replacing the regional habitat cats with Cat:Flora of Calif often next to preexisting Cat:Endemic flora of Calif -- has left me (& others) with much needless cleanup work. Please explain why you are causing that. I have created many Cat:Natural history of __ cats to replace the lost/upmerged flora ones, please use them. Also please ask me to create others before upmerging other flora ones.
Perhaps there are some other ways to have the World Geographical Scheme as the overarching structure, while developing (eg: California) something more usable than a daunting flat list of ~ 4,000+ plant species. I ask to discuss it. Thank you—Look2See1 t a l k → 07:17, 26 August 2014 (UTC)
Look2See1 -- So sorry it has taken me a while to respond to you. Your response was difficult to follow and lengthy. I will try to respond point-by-point to the best of my ability.
1) You suggested that it is bizzare that the WGSRPD uses political boundaries for subcategories but does not have a parent category consisting solely of Category:Flora of the United States. If you have issues with the WGSRPD, take it up with them. As far as I can tell, the scheme makes sense. Category:Flora of North America contains the following ten regional categories: subarctic America, western Canada, eastern Canada, northwestern US, north-central US, northeastern US, southwestern US, south-central US, southeastern US, and Mexico. Both Canada and the US do not have their own national category because the national political boundaries do not fit floral affinities. The US contains Hawaii and Alaska, but these are not in one of the six regional categories that make up the contiguous US ("lower 48 states"). The same goes for Canada -- while Category:Flora of Eastern Canada and Category:Flora of Western Canada make up most of Canada's land area, there are a few bits in Category:Flora of Subarctic America that is shared with Alaska and Greenland. Therefore, there is no need for national categories for the US and Canada as they do not have boundaries that exist wholly within a few regional subcategories. I would also note that Category:Flora of the Eastern United States is on my list for disassembling into the WGSRPD regional categories (northeast and southeast) as "Eastern US" is not used in the WGSRPD. Both "Eastern US" and "US" categories will be nominated for deletion eventually.
2) Please note that Category:Flora of the California desert regions is not a WGSRPD category and shouldn't be in the hierarchy at all. It was mistakenly left in the "North America" flora category, so I understand your confusion. The category hierarchy is still under transition to the WGSRPD, so you'll forgive the occasional one left behind.
3) Yes, the WGSRPD tries to acknowledge that political boundaries are important. We speak about, describe, write about, and make policy decision for rare taxa based on their distributions within political boundaries. For example, you don't hear the California regulatory agencies describe the fact that an endangered species is extremely rare in California but abundant in adjacent states within the same floristic province; instead, they restrict their analyses to their own state. The WGSRPD took this into account while emphasizing political boundaries and de-emphasizing the lesser-known floristic kingdom system. Remember that Wikipedia is meant to serve its readers and not specialists. We can, do, and should have articles on floristic provinces, but the structure of the category hierarchy should follow the WGSRPD so that navigation and browsing is familiar to our readers. I would also note that the floristic kingdom system is parallel to the WGSRPD and we should use only one; using both systems on articles would lead to far too much overlapping categories and overcategorization.
4) On the "natural history" categories you created, is this meant to only include flora? Or both flora and fauna? Or flora, fauna, and geological features? The scope isn't clear to me and inclusion of plants within these categories seems to constitute overcategorization. Categories are not meant to serve as lists of taxa. For that, you should create articles, e.g. List of plants of the San Francisco Bay Area. Re-read WP:CAT for clarity on that matter. In a short time here, I will nominate all of the natural history categories to be listified -- they serve no purpose as categories.
5) It wouldn't be a terrible idea to use the WGSRPD as the main structure and then include small subcategories where appropriate, but as I've noted there are editors nominating all small European country categories for upmerging to "Insects of Europe" -- they really are on a crusade to eliminate what they see as "category clutter", noting that some organisms would otherwise be included on 50+ country categories in Europe. I tried to explain to the best of my ability why this was a bad idea here: Wikipedia:Categories for discussion/Log/2014 July 2#Category:Fish of Liechtenstein. See a current, open debate at Wikipedia:Categories for discussion/Log/2014 August 29#Category:Birds of Suriname and feel free to leave a comment there. It's probably only a matter of time before those editors start nominating flora categories. In past discussions, they would probably like to see the whole of Europe upmerged, the whole of the US upmerged, etc.
6) An addendum -- you'll likely notice that today I reverted a bunch of your edits to orchid genera articles. There's good reason for this, so I thought I should explain here. It has been our long-standing practice to only include distribution categories, e.g. Category:Orchids of Belize, on species articles -- or if subspecies articles exist, for them. Not every species in a genus is native to every country of every other species in that genus, so it makes little sense to include the genus article in a country category when not endemic or monotypic.
Cheers, Rkitko (talk) 14:50, 1 September 2014 (UTC)

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Fossils

I have some what I think to believe are bison fossils. I would like to get In touch with some one about them. The land I live on, I find all kinds I different types of fossils. I have a couple pics. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 70.32.239.247 (talk) 13:12, 6 September 2014 (UTC)

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Mexico city articles

Youre popping up all over my watchlist. Thanks for doing some much-needed maintanance!!!!Thelmadatter (talk) 13:04, 6 November 2014 (UTC)

  • You're so welcome Thelmadatter. I'm enjoying and appreciating coming across your images of Mexico/Mexico, D. F. frequently on Commons. They're often the only ones of a bldg./place − or the needed "whole view" and "details" ones. Thank you for taking and uploading them!!!—Look2See1 t a l k → 19:16, 12 November 2014 (UTC)

Categorization of flora

Look2See1, you may wish to review a recent discussion of your edits.[1] Best wishes, Walter Siegmund (talk) 16:54, 3 December 2014 (UTC)

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curious

is there any particular reason to have parent and child categories mixed, ?? it would be useful to know what you understand by a paretn cat, a child cat, and why you feel a need to have them on the same category page. satusuro 02:03, 11 January 2015 (UTC) As you are still editing, but choosing not to reply, there is not much point in trying to discuss the issue. Also the problem of Indonesian categories is there are some that are also Dutch East Indies - and that needs a discussion as well, but your choice, as they say have a nice day satusuro 02:31, 11 January 2015 (UTC)

Hi satusuro, I didn't know what you were referring to in your first message. Thanks for context on second one. All the "Disestablishments by country by year" cats, such as Category:Disestablishments in Japan by year, are currently doing double duty, hence the 2 "Asia cats" added. They all have the country's "in year" subcats, a clear fit for Category:Disestablishments in Asia by year. However they also all currently have their country's "by millennia, century, and decade" subcats, and so the interim use of Category:Disestablishments in Asia also. Until there is a true parent cat without a date subdivision, such as [Category:Disestablishments in Japan], this seems the best temporary solution.
I've been (very) slowly creating [Category:Establishments in country xyz] as new parent cats for countries' millennia, century, decade, and year" establishments cats. I'm ignorant about the capacity of bots, but perhaps they could do "non-date subdivided" new parent cats for estab. & disestab. by country? What do you think? Thanks—Look2See1 t a l k → 02:55, 11 January 2015 (UTC)
biting tongue/slapping wrist... anyone who takes any time to work on cats should never be challenged... but in fact congratulated - as to setting up anything with a parent child mix in process is fine - so few people take any time or attention to cat building or maintenance, you should be encouraged and go for it - I knew of bots doing things with cats a some years ago, but havent seen in last few years working on cats - I have some enormous tasks with project tabs on talk pages ahead of me, but I darent look (every time i see a red linked talk page on a cat page...) - back to your question, as I have not seen a cat related bot of recent, suspect the easiest is by hand, so to speak... Apologies for nebulous first question, now I understand, all is well satusuro 03:15, 11 January 2015 (UTC)
Thanks for your encouragement and understanding of interim process. Will continue (very, very) slowly the new parent cats without a date subdivision. Those red linked talk pages on cats/edits, especially those by the same editors for a year on, rankle my eyes. Take care—Look2See1 t a l k → 03:38, 11 January 2015 (UTC)

Categorization

You might want to take a look at WP:DEFINING. Thanks! Editor2020, Talk 16:17, 16 January 2015 (UTC)

Hello, again. It seems we have another disagreement regarding the number and kind of acceptable categories on plant articles. I recall that the last time we discussed there, there was promise in the beginning of a productive discussion, but you never responded to my last detailed message.

My simple point here is that the article Cupressus forbesii (and, from the literature, it looks like you're right that it should be updated to the new name, but you only did half the work to that end) is already represented in regional flora categories. We try to minimize the number of categories necessary in order to avoid category clutter yet still present the distribution of the organism correctly. We do not need additional, more specific categories on this article. The Category:Natural history of California by region category tree is superfluous in most cases because it can be much better handled by the state level category, Category:Flora of California. Cheers, Rkitko (talk) 19:00, 7 April 2015 (UTC)

Categorizing Historic American Engineering Record by state

Hi. I appreciate your adding commonscat links to various subcategories Category:Historic American Engineering Record by state, but I reverted your efforts to make them sub-subcategories of the corresponding subcategories in Category:Historic American Buildings Survey by state. As you can see in Heritage Documentation Programs and official website, HAER is parallel to, not a subsidiary of, HABS. Also note that HABS, HAER, and HALS by state are already subcategories of Category:HABS-HAER-HALS documentation, so there's no need to subcategorize them further. Although HABS was founded earlier than HAER, which was founded earlier than HALS, they are all sisters under NPS Heritage Documentation Programs, not mother and children. Elizabeth Linden Rahway (talk) 10:13, 8 May 2015 (UTC)

Jazz categories

Is there a reason for your changing the sequencing of categories on jazz biographies? I tend to go for alphabetical, as it's the easiest way for a reader to find something. What is the system you are employing and what are its advantages? EddieHugh (talk) 19:16, 1 June 2015 (UTC)