GA review
The following discussion is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.
Article (edit | visual edit | history) · Article talk (edit | history) · Watch
Nominator: 12george1 (talk · contribs) 06:08, 24 October 2024 (UTC)
Reviewer: EF5 (talk · contribs) 19:36, 23 February 2025 (UTC)
- Hi, I'll be reviewing this in the coming few days as part of my attempt to cut down the insanely long backlog of weather GANs. :) EF5 19:36, 23 February 2025 (UTC)
Comments:
- All images need alt text per MOS:ALT.
References:
- Link National Climatic Data Center in all references where it appears.
- Link The Palm Beach Post in references [62], [77], [91] and [94].
- Link El Universal in reference [95].
- Link The Washington Post in reference [52].
Prose:
- The "Impact by country" table at the top of the "Impact" section is acting weird, adding |+ border=1 class="nowrap"; border-spacing: 3px; border: 1px solid darkgray;" should fix this.
NHC designated it Wilma
Why is "Wilma" italicized?The hurricane lashed parts of the Yucatán peninsula with hurricane-force winds gusts
Change "lashed" to "impacted", lashed doesn't sound right. (promotional, but for hurricanes...?)Snowfall reached 20 in (510 mm) in Vermont. In Maine, the snowfall left about 25,000 people without power.
This has an excessivve citations tag, that needs removed.- The "Bahamas and Bermuda" subheader should be changed to "The Bahamas and Bermuda"; the country is officially named "The Bahamas" (as convention-breaking as it is, unfortunately).
- Done with all of the above except for alt text--12george1 (talk) 04:01, 26 February 2025 (UTC)
Spotcheck (I'll be picking ten random references from this diff to review, since this article has 116 and listing them all would take a long time.)
- [16] (BBC News): Does not verify information.
- [15] does, on the other hand. Maybe that was placed in that position for some reason that I can't figure out or remember? Regardless, I'll delete [16] because it does not appear to verify anything that it supposedly does --12george1 (talk) 04:01, 26 February 2025 (UTC)
- [39] (United Nations Publications): "CUBA: AFECTACIÓN DE PRODUCTOS AGRÍCOLAS DE CONSUMO POR WILMA" table on page 20 of the source verifies
The hurricane wrecked 410 acres (167 ha) worth of agricultural products in Pinar del Río and Havana provinces
that the citation is used to verify. - [3] (HURDAT): I have no idea how to use this source (it's incredibly complicated and is practically a jumbled mess of data), but I'm going to WP:AGF that it verifies.
- [61] (NHC):
WILMA (S FL) 2005 3 19,000,000,000
on page 2 verifies theOverall, Wilma left about $19 billion in damage and 30 deaths in Florida,
that 61a is used to verify, and 61b is WP:CALC. - [9] (Greenbelt):
Alpha is the 22nd named storm of the 2005 hurricane season, exhausting the entire alphabetical list of names chosen by the National Hurricane Center. (Letters for which there are only a few possible names, such as “X” and “Q”, are not used in the list of names). The naming system moves on to naming storms by letters of the greek alphabet (alpha, beta, gamma, and so on). This season is the first time this part of the naming system has been called into use.
(PD source) in the source does verify the22 storms or make use of the Greek alphabet
in the article, but it does not verify theNo season would again ... for storm names until 2020.
in the article; another citation will be needed for this.
- [103] (FEMA):
Low-interest disaster loans from the U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA) totaling $101,454,500 ... The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers installed 42,425 temporary roofs as part of the Blue Roof Program, which is mission-assigned by FEMA
in the source verifies theThe former approved about $101.4 million in low-interest loans for businesses and homes and the latter installed more than 42,000 temporary roofs
in the article. - [71] (Sun-Sentinel): Title of newspaper and other insource info verifies the
Wilma inflicted a multi-billion dollar disaster in the Miami metropolitan area, including $2.9 billion in damage in Palm Beach County
in the article (71a), and verifies the info for 71b as well. - [85] (FEMA): Due to what I assume is issues within the US government right now, this source is unavailable as of writing.
- I'm assuming you're talking about "USA: Floridians approved for more than $300 million". I'm not having trouble accessing that one but I'll add an archive url anyway--12george1 (talk) 04:01, 26 February 2025 (UTC)
- [97] (LA Times): I don't see "by January 2006" anywhere in this source.
- That's based on the publication date (January 5, 2006)--12george1 (talk) 04:01, 26 February 2025 (UTC)
- [100] (USDoS):
In the wake of Hurricane Wilma, the United States is providing $100,000 to independent
verifies theThe United States provided US$100,000 to non-governmental organizations in the country
in the article.
Pinging @12george1: for the fixes, the article looks pretty good! If you want, I can do a more in-depth source spotcheck, as that is my largest concern. EF5 14:17, 24 February 2025 (UTC)