Talk:Hurricane Danielle (2010)/GA1

Latest comment: 13 years ago by 12george1 in topic GA Review

GA Review

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Reviewer: 12george1 (talk) 04:23, 6 February 2011 (UTC)Reply

Lead
  • "Hurricane Danielle was the first of four category 4 hurricanes during the 2010 Atlantic hurricane season." - Link "category 4 hurricane" to the SSHS
  • "...Danielle developed as a typical Cape Verde-type hurricane from a tropical wave on August 21." - You might want to link "tropical wave" here, since people unfamiliar with the subject think "what the heck is a tropical wave"?
  • There should probably be more details between when it became a tropical storm and a category 4 hurricane, and also include that dates, as it might appear that Danielle just jumped from a tropical storm to a 135 mph hurricane.
    • They are already in there. It says: "Danielle quickly re-intensified and became a category 1 hurricane again early on August 25.... Further intensification was gradual, and Danielle again reached category 2 strength late on August 25.... After a few days of gradual strengthening, Danielle began to rapidly intensify on August 27, and became the first major hurricane of the season.... Continuing the rapid intensification, Hurricane Danielle briefly became a category 4 hurricane on August 27...."Reaper Eternal (talk) 02:55, 9 February 2011 (UTC)Reply
      • No, I meant in the lead, where is says: "Quickly intensifying, the new tropical depression became a tropical storm eighteen hours after formation. Further intensification continued and Danielle became a Category 4 hurricane with peak winds of 135 miles per hour (217 km/h)". It sounds passive, and seems like Danielle suddenly became a category 4 hurricane.--12george1 (talk) 05:41, 9 February 2011 (UTC)Reply
  • "It then weakened, and finally ceased to be a hurricane on August 31." - Two issues, first: when it says that it had ceased to be a hurricane, that might make some people there is something missing like it hadn't dissipated. Second: August 31 contradicts what the infobox says, which reads August 30.
  • "The hurricane was the first in a series of named storms lasting through late September." - I know what you mean, but wouldn't that not seem unusual? It seems to be implying that something that usually happens, several named storms in August and September. I think you should make sound more important and say like "The hurricane was the first in a rapid succession of eleven named storms, which ended in late September", or "The hurricane started a period in which at least one tropical cyclone was active in the Atlantic for 36 days".
Meteorological history
  • "On August 20, 8:00 AM EDT..." - Link EDT
  • "As the depression tracked slowly westward, it quickly intensified, and the following day, it was upgraded to Tropical Storm Danielle, the fourth tropical storm of the season." - Looks like too many commas, why not rewrite so there are fewer commas and the idea seems less broken up. Example: *"The depression quickly intensified as it track slowly westward, and was upgraded to a Tropical Storm Danielle on the following day, becoming the fourth named storm of the season."
  • There are several occasions when mph is spelled out, while it is abbreviated in the lede; either spell out 135 mph (217 km/h) in the lede or abbreviate the use of the unit in the Meteorological history.
  • "Danielle weakened to a tropical storm with 70 miles per hour (110 km/h) winds late on August 24." According to the TCR this was an error; say that it had a remained a hurricane and mention that it was operationally downgraded to a tropical storm late on August 24.
  • "Hurricane-force winds extended out for 50 miles (80 km), and tropical storm-force winds extended out for 205 miles (330 km)" There is no period at the end of this sentence
  • "The hurricane-force winds were in a radius of 60 miles (97 km), and the tropical storm-force winds extended out for 205 miles (330 km) from the center" - Same issue
  • There is also unit inconsistency with miles, because it is spelled out here but abbreviated in the Impact section.
  • "extratropical transition" and "extratropical" lead to the same article, delink one or the other.
Preparations and impact
  • "The wave that produced Danielle caused light rain and gusty winds around Cape Verde in the days leading up to the formation of the storm as a tropical system. On August 27, a tropical storm watch was issued on Bermuda before being cancelled during the afternoon of August 28. Danielle only produced high surf and light rain as it passed about 400 mi (640 km) east of Bermuda." - Reference #21 does not cover the affects produced in Cape Verde or Bermuda.
  • "Along the east coast of the United States, two people drowned after being caught in rip currents produced by the storm." - Reference #22 does not cover two people being drowned, in fact, it does not even cover Danielle, it is actually a news alert about Hurricane Earl.
  • "Hurricane Danielle's outflow exposed the core of the more southerly Hurricane Earl. However, Hurricane Earl (then a tropical storm) retained strong circulation, and the center eventually moved back into the convection flow.[23] The outflow kept Earl a tropical storm before Danielle accelerated north and northeastward.[24]" - Sounds like something that should be in the Meteorological history.
References

Great article overall, however, it falls just short of the GA criteria, IMO. Although I had several issues, it was nothing major, so I will give you a week to fix these issues, or else I will fail. Well, hope you can fix these problem over the next week, and good luck on the WikiCup.--12george1 (talk) 04:23, 6 February 2011 (UTC)Reply

Actually, I withdrew from the WikiCup after a little over a week due to the strong opinion of many editors that it is just a race to get points and do the minimum, and I found that it was encouraging me to "cut the corners" on my articles. Reaper Eternal (talk) 15:18, 10 February 2011 (UTC)Reply
Oh, I forgot that your name was in the purple background ("withdrawn"). Well, you could have just got yourself 30 points, because I am now passing this article since it now meets the GA criteria, IMO.--12george1 (talk) 02:42, 11 February 2011 (UTC)Reply