Untitled

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Great stuff there! As a resident of Dunedin for 25 of my most formative years, I was delighted to read the page.

There must be lots more famous Dunedinites... - wasn't Janet Frame born there?

[above text copied from Talk:Dunedin, New Zealand]

It would be great to have a sound file for the NZ pronouncation of "Dunedin" in this article!

Hey i hope noone has any problem that i added this climate table? —Preceding unsigned comment added by 125.238.158.50 (talk) 14:59, 10 October 2007 (UTC)Reply

Suburbs

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A thought about the suburbs... With the three main centres, it makes sense to have separate articles for separate suburbs, With Dunedin, there are quite a number of suburbs that are writing something about, but I doubt that many of them warrant a full article. What I propose to do (unless there's any strong objections) is write an article called Suburbs of Dunedin, and give each of them its own subheading and paragraph or two. If necessary they can be moved to their own articles later, and it avoids having nine or ten new stubs. Good idea, or is it better to write separate articles now? Grutness|hello?   06:17, 20 Dec 2004 (UTC) (copying this article to Talk:Wikiproject NZ places, too)

well, it's now one week later (almost to the minute), and there's been no-one saying "Don't do it!", so the article's on its way. Grutness|hello?   06:35, 27 Dec 2004 (UTC)

Some of the late additions are out of order or even in the wrong group. One example - Halfway Bush is more outer than Bradford, surely? (OK, tell me I should fix them; but hey I didn't even attend the Labour Weekend 48th anniversary gathering of my classmates chaired by the Mayor! I'll fix them if nobody closer does soon.) Robin Patterson 04:48, 3 November 2006 (UTC)Reply

Good point. Basically anything beyond the inner range of hills is probably dbest described as an outer suburb. I've been wondering whether it's time to start breaking out some of the main suburbs for their own pages, too - probably not all of them deserve separate pages, but a decent article could be written on somewhere like St. Kilda. The main Suburbs of Dunedin page is still a good guide though. Grutness...wha? 07:17, 3 November 2006 (UTC)Reply

most remote...=

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I've just removed the following recently-added line:

Dunedin is the most remote city in the world from Western Europe. The distance from London is 19100 km.

Dunedin is remote, but this is just too vague. Dunedin and Invercargill are almost exactly equidistant from London, Auckland's most remote from Gibraltar, and Wellington is almost exactly antipodean to Madrid. "Western Europe" is just too vague for this to fly. Grutness...wha? 22:58, 10 December 2005 (UTC)Reply

I would scrap the whole paragraph about Dunedin being remote. I live in Dunedin and it doesn't seem remote to me. In terms of being remote from London or Western Europe, what meaning does this purely geographic remoteness have in the age of jet airlines and modern infrastructure? It would be more sensible to call a place remote that was physically hard or time consuming to reach, e.g. the middle of the Taklamakan desert. [MMS]

Separate History of Dunedin page?

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There's been some good expansion to the history section lately - so much so that it might be worth breaking it out into a separate page and leaving only a summary here - any thoughts? Grutness...wha? 00:57, 6 June 2006 (UTC)Reply

I think that's a good idea. The history is getting a bit bulky for the main Dunedin page --Griggonator 16:08, 4 July 2006 (UTC) GriggonatorReply

Done. Grutness...wha? 06:00, 8 July 2006 (UTC)Reply

Population

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Leave the correct information of dunedin Population, as the older version was inaccurate and needed to be corrected, do not change it! —Preceding unsigned comment added by 202.180.118.160 (talkcontribs)

It would help considerably if you could give the source of your information. The previous 2006 figure is correct according to the spreadsheet downloadable from stats.govt.nz. I'm not sure where the 2005 figures comes from.-gadfium 00:14, 23 November 2006 (UTC)Reply

For the territorial authority (Dunedin City) I've posted the offical 2006 census count and referenced it. Timothy 16:01, 11 June 2007 (UTC)Reply

Dunedin music scene in the 1980s

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I've just removed the following new addition to the page, which was immediately after the paragraph about the growth of the "Dunedin Sound" in the 1980s:

Also at this time, there was what could be described as an "anti-Dunedin sound" core developing, in reaction to the perceived elitism of the Flying Nun clique, comprised of such groups as Let's get Naked, Cactus Club and number of other unsigned, but popular bands.

This is misleading, to say the least. Let's Get Naked, Cactus Club, Gamaunche, Craig Watt, Working With Walt, Wreck Small Speakers, and many of the other Dunedin bands of the era worked alongside Flying Nun bands, and although their sound was far more diverse than that usually associated with Dunedin Sound, they tended to be grouped under the same umbrella, especially by the music scene outside Dunedin. Certainly the development of most of these bands was not "in reaction" to anything related to Flying Nun, but was instead simply in the interests of a wider music scene. Small record labels like Rational and Xpressway produced a reasonable number of these bands (so they could hardly be called "unsigned"), and in many cases compilation albums by these labels featured tracks by artists who were also connected with Flying Nun. A case in point is Xpressway's "Killing Capitalism with kindness" album, which has tracks by everyone from A Handful of Dust to David Kilgour. Other artists worked directly with both Flying Nun and smaller Dunedin labels (David Mitchell, the Jefferies Brothers and Alastair Galbraith, to name but four of them). Grutness...wha? 12:06, 29 January 2007 (UTC) (former lead guitarist and vocalist in two or three mid 80s Dunedin bands)Reply

Although I appreciate some of the comments of the writer above, I find it a bit sad that once again the 'Alternative Dundein music groups' of the 80's has been disassociated from the core 'Dundein Sound' groups. Maybe it just goes to prove that there was indeed a certain elitism involved with that movement. I was in a couple of the 'alternative' groups, namely Cactus Club & Fast Food at 8.' Although we did have opportunity to play alongside several of the 'Dundein Sound' bands, there was by in large, two very differing spheres of music existing in that era. It was difficult to forge an identitiy of our own, as the 'Dundein Sound', from my experience at least, was quite exclussive in many ways and we often felt viewed as outsiders. Please don't get me wrong, I personally liked many of the 'Dundein Sound' bands and went to their gigs. Although our bands were less popular nationwide, many of our bands were also able to pack out the venues in Dunedin at that time. The only references to the Dunedin music scene of the 80's on the net are always the 'Dundein Sound'. That's why it's sad that the original statement was removed from the Dunedin Page. So for history's sake (and for the integity of those bands concerned), there was indeed an alternative and vibrant music scene in Dundein at that time, forging out their own Dundin Sound. The alternative sound did develop of its own accord, however, I believe a major antecedent to this was in reaction to the perceived elitism of the 'Dunedin Sound.' 118.96.190.229 (talk) 02:21, 4 September 2010 (UTC) David Price (Pricey.)Reply

It's not so much disassociating them from the Dunedin sound bands, just disassociating them from the sound associated with the Dunedin Sound and with what many people instantly thought of when they heard the term "Dunedin Sound". As I said, it's more a case that people tended to associate the Dunedin Sound with Flying Nun, though there was a considerable and more diverse music scene not recording for that label (e.g., all the Xpressway artists). My own bands (The Kaftans and The Moomins) were in very much the same situation as Cactus Club as far as that was concerned (in fact, IIRC our former drummer Riki Agnew later played with Cactus Club...). I certainly don't remember that any perceived elitism from the Nun bands was in any way part of the reason for the rise of this "anti-Sound" movement - it was more a case that there was a vibrant music scene in the town and that made it easier for other bands to start up and become part of it, irrespective of their sound. Of course, as the old saying goes, your mileage may vary. Grutness...wha? 04:27, 4 September 2010 (UTC)Reply

Fourth largest city in the world by land area?

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This article (in its Geography section) claims that Dunedin is the fourth largest city in the world by land area. I've also heard "fifth-largest" quoted elsewhere. However, comparing the land area (3314.8km²) to the areas listed at List of cities by surface area, Dunedin would be around position #26. Does anybody have a reference for this claim? --Ghewgill 18:52, 6 February 2007 (UTC)Reply

Hmmm. Odd. I've always heard it as fourth largest - and also heard Mt Isa (Australia) being the biggest. perhaps there has recently been some sort of regional reorganisation in China, since most of the ones on that list 9to which I've now added Dunedin) seem to be in the PRC... Grutness...wha? 22:37, 6 February 2007 (UTC)Reply
That list seems slightly problematic. For example, nowhere in Wood Buffalo, Alberta is it described as a city, but as a very large non-dividable municipality. Similary prefecture-level city suggests that such administrative units are not really cities. On the other hand, there's quite a nice list here [1] of populations, land areas, and population densities that avoids the silliness of legal boundaries, and measures conurbations and developed urban areas. Of course, by that definition, the largest city in the world is the tri-state area. It also has Sydney well ahead of Mt Isa, and gives Dunedin an estimated 85km2. However, depending on what you consider a city, by some measures, Dunedin probably is around number 4. --Limegreen 23:53, 6 February 2007 (UTC)Reply

Tourism Dunedin is Dunedins Official Tourism Website

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The claim that dunedintourism.co.nz is the official tourism website of dunedin is incorrect.

'Dunedin Tourism' a trust operated by The Dunedin City Council a division of government is the official website of Tourism in Dunedin.

This needs to be changed immeadiately!


Regards

Adrian McCaffrey

Online Marketing Manager Dunedin Tourism

Tourismdunedin 01:56, 9 February 2007 (UTC)Reply

Noted inhabitants

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this entry is getting long, perhaps best to create new entry of noted inhabitants of Dunedin? Michellecrisp 06:00, 30 April 2007 (UTC)Reply


Wide Images

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Is there any particular reason why we need to use the wide image template and a width of 1200 pixels for the panoramas on this page? I would have thought that the 800 pixel wide thumbnails we had were perfectly adequate, especially given the large number of panoramas on this page. Wellington still uses the smaller size, so why differ. Anyway, if anyone is more interested in a particular panorama, then they can simply view the full-sized version. In fact, perhaps we don't really need to include both of my mount Cargill panoramas? (Donovan|Geocachernemesis|Interact) 08:54, 9 May 2007 (UTC)Reply

Map

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Do we need to use that map? It's pretty horrible, and I notice the same thing has been done to Auckland and Christchurch. Would it be better to have an atlas map of NZ in the background and an inset of the South Island with Dunedin coloured in?

And with the current map... we are not a dot at the bottom of the peninsula, there should be way more red! Remember Dunedin is big ;) Timothy 16:15, 11 June 2007 (UTC)Reply

Most atlases are copyright, and therefore not suitable. And one of the few freely useable (the CIA factbook) isn't very much to scale. However, if you think you can draw a better one, or that it needs more red, then you are able to edit it.--Limegreen 22:42, 11 June 2007 (UTC)Reply

We could always replace it with one of the PD maps I've made for other NZ towns and cities (e.g., the one for Milton). Grutness...wha? 09:48, 12 June 2007 (UTC)Reply

Pronunciation

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How is Dunedin pronounced?

Don/Done - eeh/a - din/dun/dean?

An audio file would be nice!

NZers in general pronounce it done-EEH-din or done-EEH-dun, but locals use two schwas: d'n-EEH-d'n. Grutness...wha? 00:29, 24 July 2007 (UTC)Reply

Split out Notable inhabitants?

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A few months back there was a suggestion to split the notable inhabitants section out into a separate article. The section is now getting very big and quite messy, so perhaps the idea should be revisited... Grutness...wha? 00:06, 15 October 2007 (UTC)Reply

It's got my vote, looking at the London and New York City (FA) articles for comparison I don't see such a section at all. XLerate 04:25, 15 October 2007 (UTC)Reply
I agree. I quite like the list, as long as it's maintained and kept current, but I agree that it is probably big and ugly enough to warrant its own page now. kabl00ey 15:00, 25 October 2007 (UTC)Reply

Just nit-pickin' here...

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Surely the albatross colony is on an island? --Pete 12:21, 21 October 2007 (UTC)Reply

The article doesn't day that it isn't! What it says is that it's on the mainland, which it is - at the end of Otago Peninsula. It's the only place in the world where there's a Royal Albatross colony on an inhabited landmass - a landmass which is simultaneously an island (the South Island) and the mainland of NZ rather than a smaller offshore island. Grutness...wha? 23:39, 21 October 2007 (UTC)Reply

Obscure sentence, is this right

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"Modern archaeology favours a date round 1100 AD for the first human (Māori) occupation of New Zealand with population concentrated along the south east coast."

This seems very strange ? Maori population concentrated along the south east coast ? Of New Zealand ? Of the South Island ? Surely most of the Maori lived in the North Island originally as they do today. Is the intention to mean, most of the South Island Maoris lived on the south east coast. I have no idea. The meaning is obscure. Someone more knowledgeable than me should consider revising this sentence.Eregli bob (talk) 10:44, 30 January 2008 (UTC)Reply

I've given it a minor tweak which hopefully will clarify things a bit. Grutness...wha? 00:13, 31 January 2008 (UTC)Reply

I wrote the sentence in the original form. It may sound strange but it's true. It's a widespread but mistaken belief that the Archaic population distribution was the same as that encountered by Cook. It wasn't. It was concentrated along the east coast of the South Island with just a very few people living in the very far north. Hardly any of the North Island was settled before 1350 and it was relatively thinly populated until about 1500. You can see something of this in the maps in Hamel, J (2001) The Archaeology of Otago, Wellington NZ: Department of Conservation ISBN 0-478-22016-2; also in those in Anderson, A (and others) (1996) Shag River Mouth Canberra, Aus; The Australian National University OCLC 34751263 ISBN 0-7315-0342-1 Parameter error in {{ISBN}}: checksum and Roger Duff's classic study of the Moa Hunters is also useful. No access to bibliographic details.) I traversed the matter briefly in Entwisle, Peter The Otago Peninsula John McIndoe Ltd., Dunedin NZ 1976 and again in Entwisle, Peter Behold the Moon the European Occupation of the Dunedin District 1770-1848 Port Daniel Press, Dunedin NZ 1998 at p.18. —Preceding unsigned comment added by Peter Entwisle (talkcontribs) 12:07, 9 April 2008 (UTC)Reply

The original sentence means exactly what it says and I put it like that after careful consideration. The population was 'concentrated along the south east coast' which in the context means 'of New Zealand' and yes, that's the east coast of the South Island - from Wairau Bar in Marlborough to the Catlins in South Otago. That's where all the big sites are. I wouldn't claim a preponderance for the southern part of the South Island's east coast but there was definitely a concentration in what is now the Dunedin coastal area. There was another to the north from about Palmerston to Oamaru and another south of what is now the Dunedin coast.This is between about 1100 and 1450. —Preceding unsigned comment added by Peter Entwisle (talkcontribs) 12:14, 9 April 2008 (UTC)Reply

Climate

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Hi, just to get some discussion going on the climate. The Foehn/ Northwest wind in winter is not cold, it's dry and warm. This is the same for all locations along the east of New Zealand....Napier, Hastings, Kaikoura, Christchurch, Timaru, Dunedin primarily. Check out a forecast in the winter. In strong NW you will find maxima in the region of 20C. It's worth noting (perhaps this may go in the main article) that in August of 2007, Dunedin recorded New Zealand's highest temperature (incredible, I know) of 22.2C. This occurred in classic Northwest conditions. Certainly not a cold wind. Whilst it is true that Central Otago is cold, this does not make it a cool wind. The source of the warmth is that it is sinking, dry air which heats up very quickly due to thermodynamic processes. This doesn't change even in winter. The Foehn wind also happens elsewhere, and a good example is in Canada. In the Calgary area, these Chinook winds are very common. In winter they are warm and melt snow, bring plants out of dormancy and other assorted problems. And the Canadian landmass is much, much colder than Central Otago. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 202.154.145.45 (talk) 09:03, 8 February 2008 (UTC)Reply

Addition to this: corrected statement....Rangiora got the warmest winter temperature (22.4C), not Dunedin, but Dunedin's August 22.2C was the highest that month. http://www.niwascience.co.nz/ncc/cs/monthly/mclimsum_07_08

Also, not sure I agree with the claim that Middlemarch frequently reaches into mid 30s. Mainly because it can't be verified. Is there a weather station in that town? Sure, you can have people in their back gardens claiming 40C+ all summer long in Central and Canterbury....the problem is that they are recorded in conditions that are not standard the whole world over, so they can't be used to back-up claims. Central Otago is actually cooler than many locals would like to think (though I would still personally describe their summers as hot). The warmest summer towns in NZ are Kawerau (BOP) and probably Hastings, not Central. Unfortunately, it's hard to find climatic data for this sort of thing. It would probably be reasonable to claim that Central exceeds 30C with frequency in summer. But the fact that the warmest temperature (officially) so far this summer is 34.8C (Timaru), I find it highly unlikely that anywhere reaches into the "mid-30s" (let alone the high 30s that was originally claimed) with genuine frequency. An interesting point is that Alexandra so far this year has been on average 5C warmer than normal, an extremely, extremely hot year in climatological terms (http://www.niwascience.co.nz/ncc/cs/monthly/mclimsum_08_01).

As most people who've lived in Dunedin for any length of time will know, the Foehn winds which come from the northwest in winter are significantly cooled by the ground conditions in Central Otago, making them icy cold - if the wind blows from the northwest in winter in Dunedin, you get thick frosts, which wouldn't occur if the wind was still warm by the time it reached us. Yes, there is usually a few hours of hot weather before hand - known to some locals as "Dragon's breath", since it is a forewarning of bitter weather for the following couple of days - but the wind then rapidly cools. As for the Middlemarch temperatures, no, there is no official reading from Middlemarch, but there used to be an official reading taken in Ranfurly, which has largely similar weather conditions. That station regularly peaked above 33.3 C (33.3 - 36.7 being logical to describe as the mid 30s). It is not unnatural to consider similar conditions likely in Middlemarch. Grutness...wha? 21:48, 8 February 2008 (UTC)Reply
The reason you get this few hours of warm weather is because of the Foehn wind, warm and from the Northwest. The rapid cooling you talk of is nothing to do with Central Otago. What happens is you get a strengthening Northwesterly, bringing you this "Dragon's breath" you speak of, warm and gusty winds- this then switches to being icy cold because the wind changes to a southerly, *not* because the NW has somehow managed to get cooled by Central.
This is a standard meteorological effect that hits of all the east of New Zealand. The hottest weather often occurs at the end of the Northwesterly, this is a sign that within a few hours the southerly will kick in and temperatures will plunge. In winter, of course this brings you your icy conditions under the often cool and clear skies that follow a southerly (southerly air is often quite dry).
As fronts approach from the west (generally), the northwester kicks in and the west coast gets buckets of rain whilst the east will get high temperatures. When the front passes, you get the southerly change and the drop in temperatures. The east is more exposed to a southerly, so the change is more pronounced all down the pacific coastline.
Next time this happens, look at a synoptic chart, you will see the isobars marking the NW wind for Dunedin etc, and behind the approaching front they will be oriented in a southerly (or south-westerly) direction. This front can pass quickly, hence you may only get the NW for a few hours of a day, followed by the cold southerly.
Central Otago is not capable of significantly cooling a Foehn wind. It's not big enough, it's not cold enough and it cannot over-ride the driving force of the warmth, which is adiabatic heating from the air sinking on the leeward side of the mountains. From your observations it is clear that what you're describing is a common NW -> S change. Wikipedia has good articles on chinook winds and foehn winds. The Foehn is often responsible for record winter temperatures all over the world, even in the UK which has very small mountains (on the east of Scotland they once recorded 18C or 19C thanks to a Foehn wind from the southwest). Any cooling that follows is due to change of wind direction.
This may be the standard meoteorological effect in much of New Zealand, but it is not what you seem to get in Dunedin winters. You get weather in the following pattern:
1) Warm, dry "Dragon's breath" from the nor'west for a few hours
2) Icy, very dry winds from the nor'west for two or three days
3) Cool, stormy, wet winds from the south for several days
It is this three-note pattern that is common in winter. The second phase of it is distincly the coldest, and also is distincly from the northwest. The southerly change which occurs as you point out due to the typical southern oscillation pattern doesn't occur ntil some considerably time after the change in temperature. Grutness...wha? 23:08, 10 February 2008 (UTC)Reply
There's nothing particularly special about Dunedin that should make it vulnerable to a "cooling" NW. Canty Plains should be subject to it also, being downstream of MacKenzie Country. And why do we not get this cooling of a Foehn wind in other countries where the land is larger and colder?
There are issues with what you are claiming:
1) The source of the air is over the Tasman Sea. Even in winter, at the latitude of Dunedin the SST there would be perhaps about 12C, getting up to 15C around Northland. This is pretty warm for winter water compared to other parts of the world (eg Northern Europe).
2) Without the Foehn effect, this would produce a fairly mild wind, leading to daytime highs in the region of 10C-15C, depending on location and various other factors.
3) Given the Foehn effect which does occur in NW conditions, this wind is stripped of moisture and heats up significantly on the leeward side- this is the basic driving force of the NW wind. Heating over land does occur in summer, but this only adds the odd degree or two. The reason for this is:
4) Air is a very poor conductor of heat. Passing a wind over warm land will only heat it up slightly in New Zealand because the country is so small. All air coming to NZ has a very long track over sea, this gradually allows either warming or cooling of the air depending on season and air source- it's not efficient and it's only because of the long track that this occurs. However, if we want the land in NZ to significantly heat up our air, we are out of luck. As I mentioned in (3), you will get the odd degree or two but nothing massive.
5) This all applies in winter also. We have a mild air source out at sea, which due to the Foehn effect ends up even warmer on the leeward side. It is possible that the air is cooled by passing over Central Otago- but the idea of it turning from a warm wind to one that is "icy cold" (in such a short distance) is notably un-physical. It cannot happen.
There are two basic means of heating up out atmosphere: Conduction and Convection. Conduction is hopelessly inefficient- relying on direct contact from land-to-air and then air-to-air. Given the insulating properties of air, alarm bells start ringing when someone claims that air can turn from warm to icy cold in such a small distance using this process.
A famous scientist once said that if the theory doesn't match the evidence then the theory needs revising. However, in this case the theory is very well understood, from several angles, even a non-meteorologist (say, a physicist with a bit of skill in thermodynamics) would recognise the processes that are occurring. The evidence suggests that your observations are wrong, how do you claim this cold wind is "distinctly from the northwest"? Can you get readings from a standardised meteorological station to prove this? Because at the moment we have considerable scientific weight versus unverified personal observations. In an encyclopaedia one of these is very much out of place. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 202.154.145.45 (talk) 05:48, 11 February 2008 (UTC)Reply
Unfortunately I can't point to documentary evidence. I agree that it seems odd that the temperature of the wind drops significantly before the change of wind direction, and have puzzled about it for many years, since it was pointed out to me by my then girlfriend, who was a met. office worker at Dunedin Airport (which dates it - they haven't had a manned met. station there for some decades AFAIK, though I doubt the weather patterns have changed much since then). However, that is distincly the way the weather patterns seem to go, unlikely though it may seem. FWIW, her best theory was that, because of Dunedin's location (both sheltered by the mountains when the wind is directly from the west and close to the country's southernmost point), it was sometimes subject to a "blended" weather pattern: a cold, moist southerly air blowing across Southland (which would be hit by any front before Dunedin) would combine with a stronger warm nor'wester, leading to a cool dry wind that seems colder as it leads to frosts. Because of the relative strengths of these winds, it would still approach Dunedin from the west or nor'west. Whether this is the explanation for this quixotic pattern, i don't know, but it does make some sense. Grutness...wha? 09:23, 11 February 2008 (UTC)Reply

Notable inhabitants

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If no one opposes, I'm going to move this into its own new article. Michellecrisp (talk) 02:02, 10 April 2008 (UTC)Reply

The idea of this was already mentioned further up this page, and there were no objections. Go for it. Grutness...wha? 23:10, 10 April 2008 (UTC)Reply
someone has put a merge tag on the Notable people from Dunedin article. I disagree, the Dunedin article is already becoming very long. Michellecrisp (talk) 00:58, 11 April 2008 (UTC)Reply

population gone from 114k to 132k in 4 years? I think not

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statistics NZ and the 06 census should be the main source for population statistics, not individual council websites, like on the pages of all the other cities in the country. Also, it's IMPOSSIBLE that the 3000sq km area could hold less people than the urban area at it's heart, it's totally contradictory. Simple maths. Unless we count that apparently imaginary extra 18,000 people who have moved there in the past 2 years. I've only noticed one major subdivision in Dunedin in that time near (Green Island), and I'm pretty sure it's not the fastest growing city in NZ, which it would easily be was this jump in population correct.

http://www.stats.govt.nz/census/census-outputs/quickstats/snapshotplace2.htm?id=2000071&type=ta&ParentID=1000014&expand=1000014&scrollLeft=&scrollTop=&ss=y

See that^, it's increased by 4000 since the previous stat of 114,000. Current population 118,683 —Preceding unsigned comment added by 60.234.210.9 (talk) 09:13, 6 May 2008 (UTC)Reply

Agree - that Statistics New Zealand should be the authority for all NZ population data.
Disagree - that the last census figure be used. Statistics New Zealand states the census is an undercount, and the data can be up to 5 years old. The estimated resident population is a better figure to use, because it is more accurate and more up to date. This is the number Auckland uses for example.
Agree - urban area population <= city area population, given the urban area is a subset of the city area, and population is a natural number.
Comment - the increase of 4,341 or 3.8 percent, over five years, is quite modest. Compare with the national average of 7.8 percent.
XLerate (talk) 13:44, 6 May 2008 (UTC)Reply

Assessment

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(copied from my talk page)

Hi Gadfium, I feel the "Start" assessment for Dunedin differs too much with the assessment guidelines. For "B" the guideline is "most or all Start criteria" but has issues such as "missing references". The article has all the "Start" criteria, and is clearly a "B" according to the guidelines. There are 18 books listed in the references, so it is not so much missing references as inline citations. If this is where the bar is set, most of Category:B-Class_New_Zealand_articles will need to be demoted, 1981 Springbok Tour, Frederick Weld, ACT New Zealand, History of Air New Zealand, all have similar or less references, basically empty the category. Please reconsider? XLerate (talk) 10:35, 13 May 2008 (UTC)Reply

The article is not only missing inline references (for the most part), but has numerous cleanup tags, at least one dating back to November 2007. I suggest you try turning on the "show hidden categories" in your preferences/Misc to see them. The "Modern Dunedin" and "Geography" sections have no refs at all, and there is a disputed tag on one statement. I accept that there is a detailed reference section which is not inline, but almost all those references appear to be for the history section, where they are anchored. These could be turned into inline refs quite easily.
The alternative to downgrading the article was to spend a lot of time cleaning it up (which of course I could have done, but I also know there are several active Wikipedians in Dunedin who could do so), remove many of the unsourced statements, or place a very obvious cleanup banner at the top of the article.
I'd be very happy to restore the B class rating if at least a few of the issues were dealt with - lets say fix the oldest requests for citations, move the refs for the history section inline, and source or remove the disputed statement.-gadfium 19:31, 13 May 2008 (UTC)Reply
I've edited the modern Dunedin section to fix it up a bit, though time is a bit short att he moment so I haven't done as much as I'd have liked. As to the "disputed" tag, I'm not sure how to deal with that one. Dunedin does have a reputation as a damp city, yet it is one of the driest cities in New Zealand (compare its average rainfall figures with Wellington and Auckland's, for instance). As such, it is a somewhat unwarranted reputation. What else can be said that doesn't breach neutrality? I've tried to fix it, but to me it looks pretty much the same as it did before. Grutness...wha? 02:07, 14 May 2008 (UTC)Reply
Sometimes removing a disputed statement that you can't find a citation for is appropriate, even if you know that it's true. Sometimes, you can simply remove the dispute tag with a minor rewording, and the editor who placed the tag is satisfied, or never comes back to check. Anyway, good work, but I'd still like to see more improvements to the article before restoring B-class.-gadfium 02:48, 14 May 2008 (UTC)Reply
I've restored the B status since the article has been significantly improved. Please don't stop the improvements.-gadfium 05:53, 14 May 2008 (UTC)Reply
Thanks for the details on what needs/needed fixing, yes there is still more do do, the Geography section is still unreferenced for example. XLerate (talk) 07:11, 14 May 2008 (UTC)Reply
Unfortunately I'm house-sitting at the moment, and all my sources are still at home in St. Clair. Maybe next time I'm back at my own place I'll be able to track down some references. The problem with some of it is that I wrote that section at least partly from "common knowledge" - i.e., what I can see out the window, what I know from having lived in Duendin for 20+ years, etc. - so actually finding individual references for it all may be a pain. Grutness...wha? 00:10, 15 May 2008 (UTC)Reply
Absolutely; I struggled to find a suitable reference for Middlemarch not known as a "suburb" in any ordinardy sense of the word - driving through farmland for an hour to get to a rural township of 300, only one or two buildings after Outram? I was going to look at referencing specific facts - years, distances, etc. NIWA may have some links with respect to the climate. XLerate (talk) 02:36, 15 May 2008 (UTC)Reply

Date of settlement

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I don't know if this is the right place to put this but: there is a side column at the beginning of the article which says (among other things) "settled by the UK 1848". What is trying to be claimed here? The Otago Association's (Scottish Presbyterian) settlement was started March 23 1848. Permanent European settlement started with the Weller brothers' Otago station in November 1831. They were "UK" people - English - so that is a date the place was "settled by the UK". There were earlier European (in fact British) settlers, so what are we talking about anyway? It also says "Incorporated 1855". The Dunedin City Corporation - the first such thing in New Zealand - was incorporated in 1865, not 1855. Perhaps that was a typo but it would be good to correct it.

Peter Entwisle —Preceding unsigned comment added by Peter Entwisle (talkcontribs) 10:50, 24 May 2008 (UTC)Reply

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I've just created {{Dunedin navbox}} for use on Dunedinarticles. it's a bit bulky and may need cutting down a bit, but hopefully it'll be useful. Grutness...wha? 00:11, 24 January 2009 (UTC)Reply

My 2c is the presentation looks good, but contents too bulky - compare {{New York City}}. I dislike large templates applied to stub articles, New Zealand Transport Agency for example - they overwhelm the article. I can suggest moving the contents to List of Dunedin topics, then trimming the template to half a dozen links. More reader-friendly, and would dovetail well especially with smaller articles. XLerate (talk) 02:00, 24 January 2009 (UTC)Reply
Well, I did mention that it ws bulky :) I based it on the one for Hamilton, which is similarly large. Grutness...wha? 05:01, 24 January 2009 (UTC)Reply

Peer review of Caversham, New Zealand

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Hi all - I've just opened a peer review of the article on Caversham - it's nowhere near FA or even GA, but it is around a B and hopefully can be improved by suggestions from the review. If you're interested, check Wikipedia:Peer_review/Caversham,_New_Zealand/archive1. Cheers, Grutness...wha? 01:27, 19 March 2009 (UTC)Reply

...and FAC

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I've just nominated the Caversham article for FAC, after finally finding a reference I've been searching for for days. Fingers crossed! Grutness...wha? 02:22, 3 May 2009 (UTC)Reply

dunedin sound

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this article could definitely do with some mention of the dunedin sound. relatively speaking, a huge amount of bands have come from the region... and yes, i'm perfectly aware that the link i posted fails WP:V --01:43, 30 November 2009 (UTC)

It's there, para starting "During the 1980s the city's popular music scene...", and links to Dunedin Sound. XLerate (talk) 02:06, 30 November 2009 (UTC)Reply

Main photo

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Here's a candidate for a different main photo. It's definitely a better perspective than what's currently there, but it's on lean (and rotating it would crop some of the city) and somewhat out of focus. See what you think. Schwede66 20:12, 25 May 2012 (UTC)Reply

4 main centres error

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Whats this malarkey about only 4 main Centres ? Census figures show that Dunedin has had fewer people than Hamilton for many years. Dunedin's"growth" has been stationary for decades. Without the itinerant student population Dunedin would be smaller than Tauranga and Rotorua. Hamilton's growth has been steady since the 1960s and now it is almost double the size of Dunedin. The "reference"to" 4 main centres" is more like wishful thinking than a real reference. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 122.62.226.243 (talk) 04:44, 18 January 2013 (UTC)Reply

Pronunciation mismatch

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The pronounced audio does not match the pronunciation guide given.

Most clearly, the middle syllable is pronounced with an "eh" sound (IPA 'e') sound in the given audio rather than a long e or ee sound as given by the IPA letter 'i'.Friecode (talk) 23:36, 13 January 2015 (UTC)Reply

Ocean Beach Railway

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A67 at Ocean Beach Railway

I am desperately searching for ... more photos of the Ocean Beach Railway. I would be delighted if someone has some, finds some or takes some. --NearEMPTiness (talk) 15:04, 11 October 2015 (UTC)Reply

Financial Importance

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It seems to me the city gets short-changed in the article. It is noted many of the nation's biggest businesses began there. It is suggested Dunedin's significance began to fall around the beginning of the 20th century. This is at least 40 years too early and possibly 60 years too early. National headquarters began to move to Wellington around the time of the second world war. Capital did not. In the 1970s and 1980s(?) national headquarters moved on to Auckland. Dunedin based investors and directors still have considerable national influence. Eddaido (talk) 11:29, 8 April 2017 (UTC)Reply

New Map idea

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Just a suggested new location map. Please remove if you don't like. I can change anything and will be adding Dunedin city limits soon (made for History of Dunedin after History of the Otago Region) Dushan Jugum (talk) 06:01, 3 December 2018 (UTC).Reply

 
Old map
 
New map?

2021 lead poisoning

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Regarding the 2021 lead poisoning section in the history, I was wondering if it would be better to create its own article. Something like the 2021 East Otago lead poisoning scare? Let me know what you think. Andykatib 07:13, 25 March 2021 (UTC)Reply

"Bio-technology"?

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Can someone please explain to me why it is so important to preserve the hyphen in "bio[-]technology"? That's not the standard form of the word, nor common usage, nor the spelling of the linked Wikipedia article, and to be frank, to me it looks jejune and amateurish. Why has it been restored repeatedly to the point that it's starting to look like an edit war? —VeryRarelyStable 07:46, 6 June 2021 (UTC)Reply

@General Ization: Absent an answer here, I'm going to change it back. —VeryRarelyStable 02:15, 7 June 2021 (UTC)Reply

Look at the edits of user Kapil121 and you will understand why this, among approximately 70 other edits, was reverted. (I then inadvertently reverted myself, which again made the piped value the same as the link, at which time you removed the pipe. I then restored the consensus version.) I have no particular opinion about the hyphen. General Ization Talk 04:06, 7 June 2021 (UTC)Reply

Does Dunedin really have "a rich Māori heritage"?

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I see that there's recently been a minor edit war (more like 'an edit skirmish') - among three different editors - about whether to say "The city has a rich Scottish, Chinese and Māori heritage" or "The city has a rich Māori, Scottish, and Chinese heritage".

This, however, begs the question: Is it really accurate to say that the city of Dunedin "has a rich Māori heritage"? Obviously, Māori settled the area for centuries before Europeans arrived, and the article notes that there was a Māori settlement ("Ōtepoti") in "what is now central Dunedin", but this was "abandoned by 1826" (prior to European settlement). And unlike some other towns/cities (e.g., Rotorua, Ruatoria), there does not seem to have been much Māori influence in the town's architecture and early culture.

Of course, we don't want to cause any disrespect to Māori, but we also need to be accurate. (I note also that the current citation that's at the end of the sentence refers only to "The Chinese community of Dunedin".) PatricKiwi (talk) 21:21, 27 June 2023 (UTC)Reply

There's also a darker bit of history; a lot of Dunedin's old stone-works, including much of the harbour reclamation, were built by Māori prisoners shipped down here after Parihaka. They were helped by the local tangata whenua and their descendants remain part of the Dunedin community. (There's a small monument to them in the Northern Cemetery, put there in the 1990s I think on what, for a long time, had been an unmarked mass grave.) Putting that together with the pre-colonial history especially around the Peninsula and the Heads, I think that's enough to warrant mentioning "Māori heritage" in the lede.
VeryRarelyStable 02:02, 28 June 2023 (UTC)Reply
That's interesting. Do you have a citation for this? PatricKiwi (talk) 05:48, 28 June 2023 (UTC)Reply
Here are a couple:
Both are about a particular legend connected with the Māori prisoners and take the fact of those prisoners' being sent here and doing forced labour as background, which is less than completely satisfactory for what you want in a source. It's also apparent that there were more than one group of prisoners, including some who were brought here before Parihaka and contributed a large fraction of the work, which I hadn't realized.
VeryRarelyStable 06:00, 29 June 2023 (UTC)Reply
K C McDonald in his history of Dunedin municipality mentions them (and that Maori Road through the Town Belt was named after them having made it). The monument is in the Southern, not the Northern, cemetery - I have a photo of it, but it's poor quality; I could try to get a better one the next time I'm in Dunedin. Daveosaurus (talk) 08:43, 29 June 2023 (UTC)Reply
Well, there is also a monument in the Northern Cemetery, because I've seen it, though I didn't take a photo. Maybe some of them were buried in each. —VeryRarelyStable 09:28, 29 June 2023 (UTC)Reply
I'll have to go looking the next time I'm up that way. The one I know of - to find it, if you download the Southern Cemetery map on the DCC web site, it's in the gap between blocks 5C and 6A in the General section - right in the middle of the grey "2" referring to the section index. Daveosaurus (talk) 10:10, 29 June 2023 (UTC)Reply