Talk:Peter van Geersdaele/GA1

GA Review

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{{al|{{#titleparts:Peter van Geersdaele/GA1|-1}}|noname=yes}}
:This review is transcluded from Talk:Peter van Geersdaele/GA1. The edit link for this section can be used to add comments to the review.

Reviewer: The Rambling Man (talk · contribs) 10:49, 22 August 2019 (UTC)

Comments looks like this was hanging around for too long, and it's a subject close to my upbringing, so here we go...

:* I agree it's not ideal, but the "Sutton Hoo ship-burial" is the standard name, and both links are relevant. This is the way it's linked in many articles that mention it.

  • It's similar in the infobox (although it looks like you've piped "ship-burial" differently from the way you do it in the lead).

:* Added a pipe.

  • Could we put a "(pictured in 2018)" in that caption? Or are we not clear when the photo was taken?

:* I don't know when it was taken. I've been meaning to send an email to his daughter, however, so will ask when I do so (she was the one who sent it to me).

  • General structure: I think three paras in the lead is too long for an article of this size, perhaps two (see WP:LEAD for MOS guidance).

:* Now only two paragraphs.

  • I think the article has strong UK ties, so we should go with "fibreglass" really.

:* Done.

  • Again, per TIES, I would expect the British Museum to have referred to "Medieval" as "Mediaeval" (or even "Mediæval"), could you just double-check that?

:* The article which is the source for that says {{tq|Authors' address: Department of Medieval and Later Antiquities, British Museum, London WC1B 3DG, Great Britain.}} Happy to change it if we find a better source that says otherwise, though.

  • "Early life and education" not sure much of this is about "education" to be honest...

:* It's a bit of a convention in the articles I've worked on (e.g., Nigel Williams (conservator) and Caroline Brady (philologist)), but there is at least a bit of education in this section school and Hammersmith Technical College, and his work at the Victoria and Albert Museum during that time).

  • "and tried out with" would this be "had a trial with"? We don't really "try out" with football clubs in the UK.

:* Done.

  • "1954 to 1976 Peter van Geersdaele worked " no need to repeat his first name.

:* Removed.

  • "a process he replicated in October 1970 " perhaps could we use a different word from "replicated" as we're talking about "replicas" already...?

:* Done: {{tq|a process he repeated in October 1970}}

  • "Anglo-Saxon Sutton Hoo ship-burial, " this is a triple-whammy SEAOFBLUE.

:* Moved Anglo-Saxon to the next sentence.

  • "two and a half decades " why not simply 26 years?

:* Done.

  • "fiberglass replica.[17][18]" you link "fiberglass" at this point...? (and apply the ENGVAR I'm recommending too if you agree).

:* Moved the link to the first mention, and changed the spelling.

  • " an estimated 6,100 kg (13,400 lb)" picky, but in 1970, did van Geersdaele really write about how much it weighed in kg first?

:* [https://www.jstor.org/stable/1505584 Yep]: "It measures 23•8 in length and 4•3 m at its widest point amidships, and the estimated weight was approximately 6100 kg (Fig. 1)."

  • " twenty-five sections." 25 (you previously mentioned 85 sections, so consistent approach).

:* Done.

  • "in 1955,[1][34][1]" so good you ref'd [1] twice!

:* Hah! Removed.

:* Not a big deal, but I generally try to add the extra link.

  • Council Tax is a formal thing, so you can capitalise it (and maybe link it).

:* Done.

That's it for a quick pass, it's a nice neat article. I'll put the GAN on hold while we go through these minor issues. The Rambling Man (Staying alive since 2005!) 11:27, 22 August 2019 (UTC)

:Many thanks for the review, {{u|The Rambling Man}}, and sorry for not responding earlier. I think I've responded to all your points above. --Usernameunique (talk) 01:02, 2 September 2019 (UTC)

::No worries, happy with your updates and responses above, some of the points I raise aren't covered by the GA criteria anyway, so I'm happy to promote. The Rambling Man (Staying alive since 2005!) 07:14, 2 September 2019 (UTC)