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This WikiProject, WikiProject Dinosaurs, aims to organise an effort to expand and improve Wikipedia's coverage of dinosaurs. These are only suggestions, things to give you focus and to get you going, and you shouldn't feel obligated in the least to follow them. But if you don't know what to write or where to begin, following the below guidelines may be helpful. Mainly, we just want you to write articles! A full list of the WikiProject Dinosaur team's achievements can be found here.
GoalsThe main goal of WikiProject Dinosaurs is to create and gather better information and articles on dinosaurs. Important tasks always include expanding and cleaning up articles, adding taxoboxes and standardising all articles. ParticipantsSee List of participants. Feel free to add yourself if you have contributed or intend to. Parentage
WikiProject Dinosaurs is a descendant of WikiProject Tree of Life.
Related WikiProjectsOpen list of tasksBelow is a list of open tasks that the project is currently working on. If you feel like you could help with the task, place your name below it by typing ~~~. Also, if you would like to post a task for others to look at, post it below or on the project talk page. If you feel a request has been fixed, please scratch it off the list, but do not delete it. Do not feel urged to place your name under every open task. All members and non-members are also encouraged to elaborate on any existing article or stub, so long as the information provided is correct and current, with appropriate sources provided. If you are in doubt about your information, post it on the project talk page for it to be read over. TasksPlease add new tasks to the bottom.
What dinosaur groups merit new articles?
Taxonomic structure
Article titlesThe titles of all articles about individual genera should be composed simply of the scientific generic name (see next section), except where the name is preoccupied. For example:
The titles of all articles about higher level taxa should consist of the common name of the group (see next section), with a redirect for the formal scientific name, or vice versa. This way both formal and common names will lead to the same article. What dinosaur images should be used?General guideline for image use:
Criteria for removing an image:
Please consider submitting new images for peer review at WikiProject Dinosaurs Image Review. Dinosaur taxa naming conventionsSpeciesWhen a species is mentioned (on its own page or another), the scientific binomial name should at least be mentioned once. After this, the genus name or common name can be used.
So:
Do not use common names too much, they look amateuristic. If you use them, realise that you are referring to the genus, or to an order ending on -ia. For example ankylosaur can be used for Ankylosaurus or for Ankylosauria. Even more informally it can refer to the family, as equivalent to ankylosaurid. Inconsequential use confuses the reader. Plurals: Best use common names, as they may be pluralised in English : e.g. 45 tyrannosaurs, but never 45 tyrannosauruses. Don't pluralise scientific (Latin) names in an English way: Velociraptors is wrong. Velociraptors is correct, but now you are meaning several species belonging to the genus Velociraptor, some of which you don't recognize. It may sound strange, but "Sarah is attacked by lots of Velociraptor and 3 Utahraptor" is the correct way. The same applies to pluralising binomial names: "John was stampeded by a large herd of Yunnanosaurus huangi and 5 Yunnanosaurus robustus". There is no change. Don't use binomials in this case unless you want to confer that the identification of the species is very important. Note: the correct plural of Velociraptor would be Velociraptores, that of Tarbosaurus would be Tarbosauri. Luckily, nobody uses these. Higher order taxaThe formal names of all groupings higher than genus are capitalised, never italicised. If fitting the situation, common names are preferrable. These are in lowercase. Example: "Lambeosaurus is a genus of hadrosaurid dinosaur" sounds a lot better than "Lambeosaurus is a dinosaur genus belonging to the Hadrosauridae". The same applies to other higher-order taxa. Note that a hadrosaur belongs to the genus Hadrosaurus, while a hadrosaurid belongs to the family Hadrosauridae. CategoriesCategories have been created for location, age, and taxonomic status, along with a few special interest categories (feathered dinosaurs, fictional dinosaurs, etc.). Please visit the "Dinosaur" category page (see bottom of this page) and use these pre-existing categories rather than creating new ones without running them by the Project talk page first. All dinosaur articles and stubs should include the location, age, and taxonomic categories. For taxonomic categories, the Project prefers not to get too specific, and most groups will not get their own category. Few family-level taxa are represented except for those that are very large (hadrosaurids, titanosaurs) and/or very notable (dromaeosaurs, tyrannosaurs). In order to keep the category navigation streamlined, please use only the most specific possible existing category for taxonomy. Multiple location and age categories may be used if applicable. Here is the hierarchy reached by general consensus on the talk page. Please discuss changes or additions there first!
Resources and referencesPrimary ReferencesThe best source for accurate information on dinosaurs is the primary literature, where original research is published. After you get a basic feel for the terminology, it becomes possible to learn by immersion by reading articles and trying to piece together what the authors are saying. A big problem, however, is access. Finding a copy of a journal can be difficult, and making copies can really add up. Subscriptions are usually obscenely expensive because most of these journals have pretty low circulation. So how do you get a hold of technical papers? Most scientific journals now offer PDFs of their articles online. Unfortunately, you are usually required to subscribe to the journal, pay a bunch of money, or go to a library that subscribes to the journal in order to access them. If you do live near a university or public library, it is not a bad idea to find out what journals they subscribe to and then spend a few hours in the library downloading PDF files and emailing them to yourself... it's a lot cheaper than making copies. However, if you don't have that kind of time or don't live near a major library, there are still a lot of places to find papers online for free, which some of you may already know about. But I'll list some of the ones I know about here:
It's not a free PDF, but a Google search for an article in the Journal of Paleontology will allow you to see the first page and abstract at JSTOR, which can be nice to confirm details on the fly. See this for example. Trying to go through JSTOR doesn't work, unless you have access (in which case you don't need the front page of the article because you can have the whole thing). Individual Researchers
Other Sites
I'm sure other people know of other places to get articles. Please add them to the appropriate section above, as long as they are legal. Google searches or searching for "pdf" on the Archives of the Dinosaur Mailing List might also nab you some more. Finally, if you really want the paper or PDF badly enough, ask someone for it politely. Methods include writing to the lead author of the paper (who is usually happy for the recognition) or using the Dinosaur Mailing List to ask. Having a friend who is attending a major university is also helpful [1]. Good non-primary sites (technical)The following sites provide some scholarly information on dinosaurs, but are not primary sources. Most are actually tertiary sources, so information may or may not always be complete, current, and/or accurate.
Click here for English translation MicroformatPlease be aware of the proposed Species microformat, particularly in relation to taxoboxes. Comments welcome on the wiki at that link.
A cleanup listing for this project is available, updated by WolterBot. More information... |
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This article is from Wikipedia. All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License.
Mercedes Car
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