Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Weather
This is the talk page for discussing WikiProject Weather and anything related to its purposes and tasks. |
|
Archives: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5Auto-archiving period: 30 days |
This project page does not require a rating on Wikipedia's content assessment scale. It is of interest to the following WikiProjects: | ||||||||
|
2024–25 WikiProject Weather Good Article Reassessment
[edit]I would like to announce that a new task force has been created to re-examine the status of every GA in the project. Many good articles have not been reviewed in quite a while (15+ years for some) and notability requirements have changed quite a bit over the years. The goal of this task force is to save as many articles as possible. Anyone not reviewing an article may jump in to help get it up to par if it does not meet the GA requirements. The process will start officially on February 1 and will continue until every article has been checked and either kept or delisted. The task force may be found at Wikipedia:WikiProject Weather/2024–25 Good Article Reassessment. Noah, AATalk 15:22, 26 January 2024 (UTC)
- Articles under review
New tornado articles and the news
[edit]I was wondering if it's a good idea to change the project's ideas for notability for new tornado articles that are considered newsworthy. The example I'm immediately going to point to is the 2024 Greenfield tornado, which took until 8 July 2024 to exist in mainspace. SirMemeGod nominated a previous mainspace article for deletion on 30 May: This article was created way too prematurely. See Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/2024 Sulphur tornado for a good example of this “too soon” policy.
WP:TOOSOON is an argument I see all too often when it comes to articles on recent individual tornadoes and I'm getting a little sick of it, especially here. The tornado had already killed 5 and was in the news cycle for its DOW-measured windspeeds of 263–271 mph (423–436 km/h), not the devastation to Greenfield. If BEST (the FARM research project that put the DOW fleet in Iowa that day) wasn't happening in 2024, it wouldn't have an article, but since it was, we had factual evidence that it was much more powerful than its assigned rating. Don't rush to delete articles is part of WP:DEADLINE, which also applies, as everyone knew that it would get news coverage for its DOW measurements eventually, and sure enough, by 24 June 2024, the DOW team calculated the figure of 309–318 mph (497–512 km/h) inside the tornado.
Although Greenfield wasn't as sensationalized as I would have expected, it also did have significant news coverage after it happened. This leads me to my point. If, say, an EF5 tornado moves through a city, and DOW catches 320mph+ wind measurements / calculations / whatever, under the current guidelines, the article is likely to be deleted until well after it occurred. My proposal is to institute a specific set of in-project guidelines for notability so that way a repeat of this situation doesn't occur.
From my understanding, the articles for 2013 El Reno tornado and 2021 Western Kentucky tornado are the best examples of tornadoes that were obviously notable enough for an article. They had a concrete death toll, record-breaking qualities, and were significant in the weather community. 2023 Rolling Fork-Silver City tornado and 2021 Tri-State tornado were both created well after they occurred. If a tornado is in the news cycle, just the one tornado, and it has record-breaking qualities or a high death toll or something else about it, like Greenfield did, then it shouldn't wait to get an article, after the significance is established.
I propose the following guidelines for establishing the notability for articles on recent (i.e. less than 1 month since they occurred) tornadoes to avoid the old WP:TOOSOON deletion arguments and all that. Note that not all of these criteria must be met.
- 1. The tornado causes over 20 deaths. (i.e. 2021 Western Kentucky tornado)
- 2. The tornado impacts a smaller-scale location, where significant devastation occurs. (none have happened recently, but think the Indiana State Fair stage collapse of 2011 if the tornado was confirmed, or the 1967 Belvidere tornado which caused 300 injuries at a school. If the only notable impact is at the location, then the article should be about the impact there, not the tornado itself.)
- 3. The tornado causes a significant amount of damage or devastation in a city of over 25,000. (i.e. 2011 Joplin tornado. The population figure is arbitrary, as is the amount of damage, but Joplin would still have been worthy of its own article before surveys were complete and before the death toll was calculated.)
- 4. The tornado sets a record for path length, path width, or another objective indicator. (i.e. 2013 El Reno tornado)
- 5. The tornado has a measured or calculated wind speed of over 300 mph (480 km/h). (i.e. 2024 Greenfield tornado)
- 6. The tornado is rated EF5, IF5, F5, or equivalent. (i.e. 2013 Moore tornado)
- 7. The tornado receives significant news coverage from non-weather and international sources. (i.e. 2021 South Moravia tornado. This is a catch-all clause that can save any tornado article as it is the clearest example of setting notability. However, the articles must be on the individual tornado, not on the parent outbreak.)
Some other notes:
- Any records must be confirmed beyond a reasonable doubt to have been surpassed. Wind speed measurements or calculations should be confirmed by the agency that produced them, and any calculated figures must be calculated by an expert and not synthesized by Wikipedia editors. (WP:SYNTH)
- The tornado does not need to have a final NCEI event database entry to have its own article.
- Tornadoes rated EF5 or equivalent must be confirmed by the relevant agency that rates them.
Tornadoes that meet any of these criteria will be spared from WP:TOOSOON deletions, as they will have clearly shown their notability already. This is assuming, of course, that everything is confirmed by independent coverage; if it is only assumed that the criteria are met, then a TOOSOON AfD can go through.
Some examples of tornadoes that don't quite meet these criteria:
- 1. 2023 Rolling Fork-Silver City tornado. It only caused 17 deaths as a high-end EF4 tornado.
- 2. Tornado outbreak of March 31 – April 1, 2023#Belvidere, Illinois. I'm referring to the EF1 tornado that caused the collapse at the Apollo Theatre in Belvidere, Illinois that killed one. It falls short of the objective devastation I propose, and doesn't even have its own section.
- 3. 2023 Little Rock tornado. Yes, over 600 injuries were reported in a major city of 200,000, however that number fell steeply to 54, with only one indirect fatality occurring.
- 4. 2021 Quad–State tornado. If we listened to the initial reports of what would be the Tri-state and Western Kentucky tornadoes, this would have had a path length of 230 miles. While perhaps the Western Kentucky part did set a record, it wasn't the figure of 230 that would have easily beaten the 1925 Tri–State tornado.
- 5. 2024 Harlan, Iowa tornado. Before Greenfield, this was a big news story in the weather community with wind speeds of 224 mph (360 km/h) calculated at ground level. That's IF4 on the International Fujita Scale and not quite newsworthy in this context.
- 6. 2023 Keota, Iowa tornado. This had an EF5 DI on the preliminary Damage Assessment Toolkit (DAT) that Wikipedia editors use so often that was confirmed to have been an error. It was, however, confirmed to have done exactly one point of low-end EF4 damage, which does technically make it violent per the EF scale.
- 7. 2024 Hollister tornado. It was the subject of much local coverage that stated it was "the most powerful tornado of all time" but of course it only did EF1 damage and all we had to go off of was radar. Its parent outbreak doesn't have its own article, and when Trey Greenwood did an analysis he found that it was not the most powerful tornado of all time and indeed probably wouldn't even have been a violent one.
I know this is a lot of text, but these guidelines will help us if an individual tornado gets nominated for ITN (most likely, I'd be the one to put it there), or if it gets enough news coverage that readers would go out of their way to find an article on it specifically, independent of its parent outbreak. Let me know what you think of this proposal. GeorgeMemulous (talk) 13:57, 4 October 2024 (UTC)
- Pinging a few editors that I'd guess would be interested in this sort of thing: @ChessEric @Sir MemeGod @Hurricane Clyde @Tails Wx @TornadoLGS @WeatherWriter @Алексеев Н. @Hoguert @Hurricane Noah
- Summary: I've written a proposal above concerning WP:TOOSOON nominations in WPW space. If agreed to, tornadoes meeting any of the 7 criteria outlined above will be exempt from TOOSOON nominations. However, they still must have reliable sources proving they meet the exemption and can be deleted for other reasons; this is merely a way to have articles about new tornadoes that have a high-impact or newsworthiness, such that they can appear on ITN or elsewhere, where traffic to the individual tornado's article warrants it to be independent of its parent outbreak. This does not affect any existing articles, but will affect any future tornado articles about tornadoes that are created under one month after they occur. GeorgeMemulous (talk) 18:57, 4 October 2024 (UTC)
- I agree to all the suggestions except 4 and 5. Also, I think the Little Rock tornado could have its own article. The 2023 Wynne–Parkin tornado article is not needed though. ChessEric 03:26, 5 October 2024 (UTC)
- Comment: I will formally have a vote later tonight, but I will note that a certain set of articles can't be "exempt" from a rule (with extremely rare cases obviously). TOOSOON is 100% a relevant policy, and a WikiProject can't overrule that. I'm even going to be bold and say that the Greenfield tornado doesn't meet LASTING, but that's just my opinion and I won't start a second AfD because I'm not dead-set on deleting a well-written article. Anyways, that's aside from the point. :) SirMemeGod 19:06, 4 October 2024 (UTC)
- Also courtesy ping @United States Man: and @TornadoInformation12:, since I know they'd be interested. SirMemeGod 19:10, 4 October 2024 (UTC)
- Comment This isn't meant to override TOOSOON, rather to better define it within the project space. As it is, one of the main reasons the Greenfield tornado was voted to be deleted was it didn't have an NCEI entry, even though it had plenty of news coverage establishing notability. This proposal is meant to counter that.
- Also, LASTING isn't a formal reason to delete I'd think. Moreso, a reason to keep articles that cause events beyond them to happen. GeorgeMemulous (talk) 19:11, 4 October 2024 (UTC)
- LASTING is under WP:NEVENT, a formally-designated policy that can either be used as creation or deletions. I had just said that to add, it wasn't really anything of note (also don't worry, I won't target the Greenfield or Elkhorn articles). :) SirMemeGod 19:13, 4 October 2024 (UTC)
- I would actually support having an exemption to WP:TOOSOON for high impact tornadoes. Especially ones that would be candidates for ITN.
- But I also think tornado outbreak articles (only for outbreaks that have already happened) should have some clarification as to when TOOSOON applies (although maybe not an outright exemption). Hurricane Clyde 🌀my talk page! 21:09, 4 October 2024 (UTC)
- But I’d like to also add to the above and courtesy ping @Hurricanehink and @Ks0stm as well; since they participate in weather-related projects. Hurricane Clyde 🌀my talk page! 21:10, 4 October 2024 (UTC)
- LASTING is under WP:NEVENT, a formally-designated policy that can either be used as creation or deletions. I had just said that to add, it wasn't really anything of note (also don't worry, I won't target the Greenfield or Elkhorn articles). :) SirMemeGod 19:13, 4 October 2024 (UTC)
- Support. Yea this all makes sense on an individual basis. ♫ Hurricanehink (talk) 03:10, 7 October 2024 (UTC)
- Support, I'm also getting sick of TOOSOON used as an argument as well regarding tornado and weather event-related articles in general. Guidelines above are well-said and I don't see a problem with them at all along with the examples noted above. ~ Tails Wx 20:45, 16 October 2024 (UTC)
I'm going to attach a table of tornadoes and their notability by this proposal, as well as general notability as gauged by my opinions and those of other editors.
Tornado | 20+ Fatalities | Localized devastation | Widespread devastation | Objective record | 300 mph recorded | F5 / equivalent | Significant coverage | General notability | Has an article |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2011 Joplin tornado | Yes | No | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
2013 Moore tornado | Yes | No | Yes | No | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
2013 El Reno tornado | No | No | No | Yes | Yes | Maybe | Yes | Yes | Yes |
2013 Washington, Illinois tornado | No | No | Maybe | No | No | No | Maybe | Yes | Yes |
2020 Nashville tornado | No | No | Maybe | No | No | No | Maybe | Yes | No |
2021 Western Kentucky tornado | Yes | Maybe | Maybe | Maybe | No | No | Yes | Yes | Yes |
2021 Tri-State tornado | No | No | No | No | No | No | No | Yes | Yes |
2023 Little Rock tornado | No | No | No | No | No | No | No | Maybe | No |
2023 Keota, Iowa tornado | No | No | No | No | No | Maybe | No | No | No |
2024 Sulphur tornado | No | No | Maybe | No | No | No | No | No | No |
2024 Hollister, Oklahoma tornado | No | No | No | Maybe | No | No | Maybe | No | No |
2024 Elkhorn–Blair tornado | No | No | Maybe | No | No | No | Maybe | Maybe | Yes |
2024 Greenfield tornado | No | No | No | No | Yes | No | Maybe | Yes | Yes |
These are my view on these tornadoes, if you have a counterpoint to any of these entries feel free to reply. GeorgeMemulous (talk) 14:18, 5 October 2024 (UTC)
Requested move at Talk:Tropical Storm Conson (2021)#Requested move 8 September 2024
[edit]There is a requested move discussion at Talk:Tropical Storm Conson (2021)#Requested move 8 September 2024 that may be of interest to members of this WikiProject. asilvering (talk) 00:25, 21 October 2024 (UTC)
Requesting help with imagery for 2024 British Columbia floods
[edit]Hello all,
I am working on 2024 British Columbia floods. I am hoping someone can help me by getting satellite imagery into Commons that I can use in the article. I have no experience uploading public domain images myself. I am especially interested in GeoColor imagery showing the extent of the atmospheric river during the day on October 19.
I have created the Commons category 2024 British Columbia floods for this event. I will make a similar request for pictures in Wikipedia:WikiProject British Columbia.
Thank you. DJ Cane (he/him) (Talk) 00:06, 22 October 2024 (UTC)
Proposal: Segmented meteorological synopsis / impacts
[edit]On large articles covering multiple days of weather, such as Tornado outbreak sequence of May 19–27, 2024 and Severe weather sequence of July 13–16, 2024, the 'meteorological synposis' is a section of the article that covers nearly everything in the articles (aside from non-tornadic effects and individual tornadoes) and has far exceeded its role as an explanation of a meteorological setup in most articles of this type. A fictional example below:
Meteorological Synopsis
May 7 event
On May 7, an upper level trough brought high instability values to Oklahoma. Soundings indicated the presence of elevated CAPE and helicity values that would be supportive of severe weather. At 3 pm, the first line of supercells began and a tornado watch was issued. This line progressed eastward and continued organizing, and at 5:12 pm, a tornado warning was issued for Oklahoma city. An intense EF3 tornado moved through the outskirts of the city, injuring 4 and causing significant damage. Further north, severe hail over 3 inches was recorded.
May 8 event
On May 8, as the system moved eastward into Arkansas, etc.
Notice how the first section of it goes into the meteorological setup, the second segment details the evolution of storms, and the third is the impacts that almost never go into the Impacts section due to the way everything's organized. That's why I propose to segment articles not into broad Meteorological synopsis / Impact groups, but rather by day. For instance, the above fictional article would have a table of contents that reads like:
- Meteorological Synopsis
- May 7 event
- May 8 event
- May 9 event
- Confirmed tornadoes
- Oklahoma City
- Impact
- Non-tornadic effects
Whereas, for my proposal, the article would be organized as:
- May 7
- Meteorological synopsis
- Impacts
- Oklahoma City
- May 8
- Meteorological synopsis
- Impacts
- Confirmed tornadoes
- Non-tornadic effects
- May 9
- Meteorological synopsis
- Impacts
This will make the article much more cohesive instead of having to jump across the article to find events that happened on the same day but aren't the same type. GeorgeMemulous (talk) 15:13, 24 October 2024 (UTC)
- I'm test-running this proposal at Draft:Tornado outbreak of November 2–3, 2024. Let me know what you think. Departure– (talk) 22:09, 3 November 2024 (UTC)
Make sure you watchlist the article, because barring some unforeseen occurrence, the .01” of rain in NYC will mark the driest month and October on record at that site and the article will need to be updated. 107.122.189.83 (talk) 23:05, 31 October 2024 (UTC)
Good article reassessment for High-pressure area
[edit]High-pressure area has been nominated for a good article reassessment. If you are interested in the discussion, please participate by adding your comments to the reassessment page. If concerns are not addressed during the review period, the good article status may be removed from the article. Z1720 (talk) 13:48, 3 November 2024 (UTC)
Should that article be created? The drought is nearing historic levels. Pinging Hurricanehink, a resident of a drought infected area. 71.246.109.203 (talk) 21:35, 7 November 2024 (UTC)
- Two things, 71.246.109.203 (talk · contribs). First, I don't live in the northeast anymore. But two, there is probably enough information for an article. Why don't you create an account and try putting some information together? There have been record long periods of no rainfall across the Atlantic, and there have been some wildfires. Events like this remind me that we could probably use yearly articles for droughts/wildfires. ♫ Hurricanehink (talk) 17:23, 8 November 2024 (UTC)
Awesome, looks like 2024 Northeastern United States wildfires was created. ♫ Hurricanehink (talk) 17:31, 12 November 2024 (UTC)
Track maps in tornado articles
[edit]Since I've recently been trying to implement DAT-based track maps within articles (specifically this one and this one), I think it'd be nice to have a discussion as to whether track maps would be necessary within articles, or if they take up too much space. If they are a benefit, then I wouldn't mind having a larger discussion about the use of track maps and the guidelines for including them. If there is consensus that they are beneficial, then I wouldn’t mind adding them to several articles, and we’ll see where it goes from there. Pinging @Hurricane Clyde:, @Hoguert: (who I got the template from), @Dylan620: (since they may be interested), @Departure–:, @TornadoInformation12:, @Tails Wx: and @HamiltonthesixXmusic: for their opinions. EF5 22:55, 11 November 2024 (UTC)
- I’d like to add @Hurricanehink and @WeatherWriter to that ping list.
- And as for the track maps. It probably depends on the case. But I would support track maps in most cases. Hurricane Clyde 🌀my talk page! 23:07, 11 November 2024 (UTC)
- Also @EF5, some of these people that you’ve pinged haven’t edited in weeks/months; and might not respond. Hurricane Clyde 🌀my talk page! 23:09, 11 November 2024 (UTC)
- True, I guess they may still come back if pinged. :) EF5 23:21, 11 November 2024 (UTC)
- Also @EF5, some of these people that you’ve pinged haven’t edited in weeks/months; and might not respond. Hurricane Clyde 🌀my talk page! 23:09, 11 November 2024 (UTC)
- A lot of articles are cramped for media as they are, and also it should be noted that some tornadoes (cough cough Lemont, Illinois, 13 June 1976) aren't straight lines. In some cases, like El Reno 2013, a map tracing a straight line between start to end points of a tornado may miss where the tornado's worst impacts occurred entirely. Departure– (talk) 23:14, 11 November 2024 (UTC)
- I'm in support of having some track maps for tornado articles and/or maybe outbreak sections. Speaking of cramped media, I've been reading up a lot on WP:Gallery and honestly, just like their example gallery (Women's suffrage in New Zealand#Gallery), weather articles can probably have some galleries as well. For example, the 2023 Rolling Fork–Silver City tornado caused like 15 instances of EF4 damage, yet only 3 EF4 damage photos are shown in the article (before, in, and after Rolling Fork). That said, instances of discussed EF3/EF4 damage are not shown. That aspect helps qualify images for a possible gallery, since it would not be just random images, but rather, images of items directly discussed/mentioned in the article itself. So, adding galleries for additional photos of places/damage directly discussed in the article would help allow more photos while also keeping the article itself not cramped with media. Adding some galleries also opens the door for track maps in the article itself (not in the gallery) and the gallery would free up space for it. The Weather Event Writer (Talk Page) 23:43, 11 November 2024 (UTC)
I think a map could be useful if it was a tornado in a downtown area of a major city, where the map is especially important. I hate to say it, but if it's a random EF4 in some random city, I don't think the map is necessary, like in the case for the Cullman tornado. ♫ Hurricanehink (talk) 17:33, 12 November 2024 (UTC)
Requested move at Talk:Hurricane Paul (1982)#Requested move 30 Oct 2024
[edit]There is a requested move discussion at Talk:Hurricane Paul (1982)#Requested move 30 Oct 2024 that may be of interest to members of this WikiProject. Raladic (talk) 15:42, 13 November 2024 (UTC)