Talk:Alexander Dalrymple

Dutch discovery note
"While this is regarded as the primary discovery and record of mainland Australia, Dutch explorers and trading vessels made the first European contact along parts of the Northern coastline up to a century earlier." - not sure that this adds anything to our knowledge of Alexander Dalrymple, and is out of place at the end of this article. I'm deleting it, and if someone wants to put it in the body of the article to provide some sort of in-depth context, well and fine. --Iacobus 03:09, 2 October 2006 (UTC)
 * From memory this was an addition proposed and inserted at the behest of a previous aggrieved contributor, objecting to formulation of the British 'discovery' of Australia. Agree it is superfluous to the subject at hand and thus to its deletion Dick G 10:19, 2 October 2006 (UTC)

Additions in incoherent English
The following was added on 27 December 2015:

"He robbed the important Spanish charts when was the last British Governor of Manila. Dalrymple ordered looting most of the documentary resources of the city, which was the most important Pacific documentary and map center. So, plunders especially important library of the great Augustinian convent of San Pablo. There he could get a bibliographic and cartographic treasure all mapística work Andrés de Urdaneta, who was Augustinian, documentation, improved, still in use by the Spanish sailors and provided false discoveries of Cook."

It is incoherent and possibly added by somebody with an exaggerated trust in Google Translate. I see no reason to keep it in the article, but it may of value for future editing and worth preserving here on the talk page. --Hegvald (talk) 08:18, 30 January 2016 (UTC)