Talk:Columbia River/GA2

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I've taken another look at Ruhrfisch's comments from his/her GA review, and believe all the most significant concerns have been met. Not every single concern, but the most important ones. I'm going to re-nominate, and leave a note to Ruhrfisch requesting that he/she revisit the review if time allows. Any thoughts? (I know there are still many improvements in progress, but I don't think any of them will hold this back from GA. I'm convinced by recent comments that FA may be a little further off.) -Pete (talk) 18:32, 20 March 2008 (UTC)[reply]

I think it's definitely GA material. Excellent work, Pete (and others)!Northwesterner1 (talk) 20:56, 20 March 2008 (UTC)[reply]
I will review it in the next day or so. My initial impression is also that it is quite good, but I need to carefully read and check the article. Ruhrfisch ><>°° 21:17, 20 March 2008 (UTC)[reply]
I read all of the article and the talk page again and am passing it with congratulations. It is obvious much work has been done since the first GA nomination and I believe it is close to FA status. I agree that Wikipedia needs better articles on larger rivers and see this as a potential model FA. Here then are some ideas and suggestions for further improvement, as well as a few typos / things that need to be fixed.
  • Geology section - something is missing in this sentence (at least a verb) A mountain on the north side of the Columbia River Gorge, likely a result of the Cascadia earthquake in 1700, in an event known as the Bonneville Slide. The slide is referred to later in the Indigenous peoples section.
  • The Navigation section opens with the Columbia Bar, then repeats much of this information in the Opening the passage to Lewiston subsection. While I am fine with mentioning the bar twice, the current wording seems overly repetitive.
  • Deeper shipping channel section - the last verb in this sentence does not seem to match the previous two verbs (parallel construction): The federal government is paying 65 percent, Oregon and Washington are paying $27 million each, and six local ports make payments as well.[42][45]
  • The footnote for the textbox quote from "Timothy Egan, in The Good Rain" is essentially hidden on my computer (IE) - just the very top shows - I can not tell what number it is.
  • I noted with interest the discussion of tributaries on the talk page. For FA, I think this section needs to be expanded. I think a discussion of the major tribs and a sentence or two on the smaller major tribs and a paragraph on each of the major tribs would be useful. I would also add the size of their drainage basins to the table.
  • I finally note that the footnotes are not consistently formatted. Internet refs should have title, publisher, author (if known), and date accessed. However, since Wikipedia:Compare Criteria Good v. Featured says "consistently formatted inline citations" are only required for FA, I will just make this a strong suggestion.

Congratulations and well done! Ruhrfisch ><>°° 21:53, 22 March 2008 (UTC)[reply]