Wikipedia:WikiProject Rivers

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First, an important note for everyone to remember:

A few Wikipedians have gotten together to make some suggestions about how we might organize data in articles about rivers. These are only suggestions, things to give you focus and to get you going, and you shouldn't feel obligated in the least to follow them. But if you don't know what to write or where to begin, following the below guidelines may be helpful. Mainly, we just want you to write articles!


Contents

Title

WikiProject Rivers

Scope

This WikiProject aims primarily to describe the Earth's rivers in a consistent and complete fashion.

Parentage

The parent of this WikiProject is the WikiProject Geography.

Descendant Wikiprojects

No descendant WikiProjects have been defined.

Similar Wikiprojects

for naming in geography: Wikipedia:WikiProject_Subnational_entities#Naming

Participants

Naming

River articles may be named "X", "X River", or "River X", depending on location and most common usage. "X river" and "X (river)" are not recommended.

This does not say what has to be used in general, whether plain "X" or "X River" (e.g. rivers of Germany are currently mostly "River"-less). "River X" is used for rivers in the UK and Ireland.

If different rivers with the same name exist, use bracket-disambiguation (e.g. Vils (Danube), Turiec River (Váh), Bistriţa River (Moldavia), Colorado River (Texas)).

Multiple rivers with the same name

Due to the fact that there are countless rivers in the world with the same name (e.g. the Columbia River has two tributaries named the Salmon River, and one more has been identified in Nova Scotia), not all of which are recent namings in the Americas (e.g. there are four Avon rivers in England), the following method of disambiguation is proposed:

Rivers with multiple names

Some rivers have names with multiple spellings which vary with the different countries the rivers pass through. (An example would be the Cunene River in Angola, which is known as the Kunene River in Namibia. Occasionally, a river can have several genuinely distinct names. For example, the Cuando River not only has the variant spelling Kwando, it's also called the Linyanti and the Chobe. The following rules are suggested for choosing a primary name for such a river:

  • If the river is particularly famous under one name, then choose that name.
  • If the section of the river that uses a particular name is much longer than other sections, then use that as the name.
  • If everything else is equal, then choose the name for the section of the river closest to the river's mouth, since generally that is where the river is widest.

Article Structure

Lead Paragraph

The first paragraph should be a self-contained description including the most important things to know; name(s) - both historic and current - in bold, location (continent/countries/seaboards), and notable facts about the river, such as longest, second longest, main waterway of a country, etc.

Course

The narrative description of the course should proceed from the main headwater of the river downstream to its mouth, noting direction, size, major tributaries, human settlements, waterfalls, dams, and so forth. This should be at least a paragraph, may be several paragraphs for long rivers.

This section can include numerical data on length, volume, drainage basin, etc.

Info on water basins can be found at World resources Institute (site is down; archive)

Natural History

Mention distinctive plants and animals associated with any part of the river.

Geology

The evolution of some rivers has been well explored (e.g., the Missoula Floods and their effect on the Columbia River). Such information should be placed here, with a suitable discussion of all POVs when possible.

History

Describe what is known about the different inhabitants along the river, along with a description of the scientific exploration expeditions/efforts.

Economy

A countless number of rivers have been used as means to transport people, goods, etc., and are still used so today. All such information should be described here. Stylistically, this can be a good segue from history, connecting past uses of the river to present-day uses.

Lists

List the tributaries, starting from the mouth and going upstream. Add important subtributaries in sublists. Major tributaries should be links if there is a reasonable chance of article content, minor tributaries should be just names.

List the cities and towns along with the river, also in upstream order.

List dams, locks, waterfalls, rapids, if there more than a couple and/or they're not mentioned in the lead or course narrative.

References and External links

Preferably refer to history, ecology, public policy, books, websites, etc.

Images

There should be at least one picture, preferably a typical view. Important rivers should have additional pictures illustrating their notable features. Maps of the river's course and of its watershed are highly desirable.

Indexing

Every river article should be indexed in list of rivers by name, and indexed in list of rivers by continent, along with its major tributaries.

Categories

Every article should have a category. If a river is restricted to one country, list in Category:country rivers. If it runs through several list in each country category and maybe Category: continent rivers.

Other river-related articles

List articles

Related categories

Hierarchy Definition

No classification of Rivers has been defined.

See this example on dividing a topic into a hierarchy.

Template

Template:Infobox river

Use the template {{Infobox_river}} for representative images and basic information about a river. The example at right shows how it looks. See the template's discussion page for instructions, examples, and blank versions of the template to start with.

Sources

ja:Wikipedia:ウィキプロジェクト 河川