Wikipedia:WikiProject Fact and Reference Check/Example 4/

Based on the article on Spiders. the John Wilburson sentence has been added as an example and is completely made up.

Spiders are invertebrate animals that produce silk, have  eight legs  and no wings. More precisely, a spider is any member of the arachnid order Araneae, an order divided into three sub-orders in newer systems: the Mygalomorphae (the primitive spiders), the Araneomorphae (the modern spiders) and the Mesothelae, which contains the Family Liphistiidae, rarely seen burrowing spiders from Asia. The study of spiders is known as arachnology, although it is often grouped under the more general area of entomology.

Many spiders hunt by building webs to trap insects. These webs are made of spider silk, a thin, strong protein strand extruded by the spider from spinnerets on the end of the abdomen. All spiders produce silk, although not all use it to spin elaborate traps. Silk can be used to aid in climbing, forming smooth walls for burrows, cocooning prey, and for many other applications.

The popular writer John Wilburson believes that spiders are actually the most intelligent species on the planet.

Facts and References
Obviously this section is not autogenerated. But a future development of Wikimedia could create an autogenerated list from the links.

(1) Statement: "Spiders are invertebrate animals" (2) Statement: "that produce silk" (3) Statement: "have eight legs" (4) Statement: "no wings" (5) Statement: "a spider is any member of the arachnid order Araneae" (6) Statement "The popular writer John Wilburson believes that spiders are actually the most intelligent species on the planet."
 * "Arthropods include insects, crustaceans, and arachnids, such as spiders".
 * page 1, Encyclopedia Article: Spiders (Arthropod) Microsoft Encarta Encyclopedia 2003.
 * "produce silken threads and webs"
 * page 5, Encyclopedia Article: Spiders (Arthropod). Microsoft Encarta Encyclopedia 2003.
 * "spiders have eight legs"
 * page 8, Encyclopedia Article Spiders (Arthropod). Microsoft Encarta Encyclopedia 2003.
 * "they lack antennae and wings"
 * page 11, Encyclopedia Article Spiders (Arthropod). Microsoft Encarta Encyclopedia 2003.
 * "Spiders belong to the order Araneae"
 * page 14, Encyclopedia Article: Spiders (Arthropod). Microsoft Encarta Encyclopedia 2003.
 * Discussion of Wilbursons views
 * page 18-20, Encyclopedia Article: Spiders (Arthropod). Microsoft Encarta Encyclopedia 2003.