A fact from Sabinoso Wilderness appeared on Wikipedia's Main Page in the Did you know column on 5 April 2017 (check views). The text of the entry was as follows:
Did you know... that the 16,030 acres (6,490 ha) of Federal land in New Mexico's Sabinoso Wilderness are inaccessible without trespassing, because they are entirely enclosed in privately-owned property?
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Hey Gorthian. That pretty much covers the summary, which was easy enough, but in the body they go into more depth as far as the types of rock formations in the area, the periods they represent, pages of gravitational measurements (no idea) and the like. It seems fairly important from a scientific standpoint, but it's enough beyond me that I wouldn't know if I were summarizing it wrong, because to me it's just words with no real meaning, and even worse, at times math and symbols with even less. TimothyJosephWood22:43, 15 March 2017 (UTC)Reply
The details of the geophysical studies are a bit much for this article, especially as most of the results were basically negative. We could expand a bit on the geology beyond that bit re: the 3 formations. The USGS report provides quite a bit more on this. Perhaps rename the Mineral resources section Geology and move the brief 3 formations bit into it and expand with a summary of the additional stratigraphy/structural (the Sierra Grade arch) info of the report. Vsmith (talk) 00:57, 16 March 2017 (UTC)Reply
Sounds good to me. I just thought it was too much of a high quality source on a topic with otherwise comparatively little available, and I wanted to squeeze all the information out of it that I could. It's a hundred times better than the current source for the geology factoid currently in the article. TimothyJosephWood09:59, 16 March 2017 (UTC)Reply