Talk:Boothia Peninsula
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So where is the Boothia Peninsula anyway? This map doesn't really say..
- The shading is the clue. The two peninsulas with edges shaded in Red are the the Boothia and Melville Peninsulas. -- Geo Swan 03:33, 4 October 2005 (UTC)
- Great - So which shaded area is which? It's not marked which one is which! Am I supposed to know already? -- Commking, 4 October 2005 (UTC)
- In English, and other European languages, we read from left to right. The peninsulas are named left to right. If I was writing form an Arabic or Hebrew wikipedia I would list them in the opposite order. Do you really not find that clear enough? -- Geo Swan 13:27, 4 October 2005 (UTC)
- Err, no, it is most definitely not clear. And, no, the peninsula's are not named left to right at all on this map - they are blank and unmarked. It's not implied or stated in any way either graphically on that map or the accompanying text, in English or any other language, what we are looking at. It is unclear, it is ambiguous, and so it should be fixed. (And why do we need the Nunavut Peninsula shaded on this map anyway?) -- Commking, 4 October 2005
- There is a long convention where the label is in the caption, not in the image. Photographs with multiple persons are routinely labelled in the caption. And if the order of the persons, or items, in the image are not specified everyone understands the listed names are applied to the image in left to right order. I thought it would be clear in this image too. You say it isn't clear to you? Fine. I've changed it.
- I don't know what you mean by the "Nunavut Peninsula". Could you please clarify? -- Geo Swan 02:03, 5 October 2005 (UTC)
- Now it's clear thanks. -- Commking, 4 October 2005
Bellot Strait & Amundsen's NWP route
editThis article states Amundsen used the Bellot Strait in his E-W North West Passage transit in the yacht Gjøa, when in fact Amundsen did not enter the Gulf of Boothia, but stayed N of Somerset Island and went S down Peel Sound passing the western opening of the Bellot Strait.
Sources:
The Last Place on Earth Roland Huntford pp.87-88
Transits of the Northwest Passage to End of the 2015 Navigation Season R.K.Headland, Scott Polar Research Institute
Wikipedia article Roald Amundsen - North West Passage
The incorrect information appears to originate in an edit from 01:37hrs, 13 March 2012 by User Geo Swan made in good faith.
Although I am a long-standing Wikipedia contributor, I am unsure how to contact Geo Swan to suggest a revision, so instead I have marked this error with a citation needed tag and a desciptive reason.
MrEckLeckTick (talk) 10:49, 29 April 2017 (UTC)
- Greetings!
- Among the ways to give another contributor a heads-up, is the use of the {{ping}} template. @MrEckLeckTick: {{ping|MrEckLeckTick}} should give you a heads-up.
- Yes, my edit was made in good faith, thanks. I can't find my copy of Delgado's book, so I can't cite a page number. Delgado was the curator of the Vancouver Maritime Museum, where the St. Roch is a museum ship, so I do trust him.
- Since you have page numbers, and I don't, I suggest we defer to you -- at least, until I find my copy of Delgado. If I find it, and it confirms he unambiguously asserts Amundsen also used Bellot, I'll probably just let it slide.
- Cheers! Geo Swan (talk) 22:52, 29 April 2017 (UTC)
- Done