This editor is an Illustrious Looshpah and is entitled to display this Book of All Knowledge.
Wikipedia editor
This is a Wikipediauser page. This is not an encyclopedia article or the talk page for an encyclopedia article. If you find this page on any site other than Wikipedia, you are viewing a mirror site. Be aware that the page may be outdated and that the user whom this page is about may have no personal affiliation with any site other than Wikipedia. The original page is located at https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Adflatuss.
An editor notified me when this article was nominated for Good article since I had recently contributed. The history narrative was jumbled so I tried to sort it out the good faith edits that had accumulated. I passionately started to piece together the history and worked to understand the role and authority of the different agencies. I have made the most edits to this article by far, probably because I was improving the content and integrating new content in. It is actually easier to start a new article than make major Improvements to one that needs it. I was hoping others would join in to improve the content that was mentioned in the review for which I neither had the expertise nor interest. Without further assistance, it didn't reach Good article status but I learned a lot about a widely misunderstood body of water.
I became interested in American bison and began looking for places with conservation herds. I created List of protected grasslands of North America as I was found grasslands with and without bison. That led me to learn more about the history of bison conservation and go beyond a list to start this article in December 2021. I moved the bison list to the article on bison which is my third most edited article. It is interesting that bison is used as the scientific term but buffalo is commonly used as it continues to hold cultural significance, particularly for Indigenous people. I had became interested in American bison after learning about the herds at American Prairie. As I learned about the nature preserve, I extensively improved the article, making it my second most edited article. Near the end of October 2022, American Prairie was the subject of 60 Minutes which shot up the page views astronomically for two days. I was glad it was available though I immediately made a few more improvements.
I added a citation to an article on the Lassen Pack which was California's only known wolf at the time. I kept updating the article as more wolves entered and copied a bit from OR-7 that was relevant as I started a section titled Reentry of wolves into California. With continued expansion the title became the repopulation of wolves in California which began in late December 2011 when OR-7 became the first confirmed wild wolf in California since 1924.
The Repopulation of wolves in Colorado caught my attention so I started I started another article using my experience of figuring out how to construct the California article. As the people of Colorado were preparing to vote on reintroduction, wolves started wandering into the state which made it interesting. As the story progresses, I would welcome more assistance with keeping the article up to date.
The Repopulation of wolves in Midwestern United States was a completely different story so I started another article on how a Minnesota remnant, with some help from wolves from Canada, have spread into three states amidst lots of consternation and excitement.
This link formerly redirected to the City of Port Hueneme. How could a significant west coast port not have an article? An Administrator moved the article over the redirect since I didn't want to "copy and paste".
Major contributor (my eighth most edited article) and appreciated the reviewer opening my eyes to issues so the article could be expanded and fine tuned. Enjoyed working with other editors who dropped in to help make an article that was written very well, contained factually accurate and verifiable information, was broad in coverage with a neutral in point of view, and was illustrated by relevant images. I pushed it over the finish line so it could be listed as a Good article under History: North American history. I have continued to track the news and add to it. This inspired me to start Gaviota Coast. Did you know that a Southern California coastline was once under consideration to be designated a National Park? A fact from this article was featured on Wikipedia's Main Page in the On this day section on May 19, 2018, May 19, 2020, and May 19, 2023.
I started this article in February 2016 after reading about a battery recycling plant in southeast Los Angeles County that emitted toxic metal dust over decades contaminating as many as 10,000 homes in half a dozen working-class, Latino communities near the plant. I was surprised when in March 2018, a bunch of additional sites of this company throughout the U.S. were added along with detail and citations. After getting over my shock, I realized the title could cover all these and had to rewrite the lede to fit. It probably could still use some editing to integrate the material and update the status of all of the sites.
I started this page in February 2020 when I heard about this 1.3-mile-long (2.1 km) open-air museum dedicated to preserving the history and culture of African Americans being constructed along Crenshaw Boulevard in Los Angeles.
I found an interesting newspaper article about this Post office being for sale. I wanted to add it as a reference to the appropriate article but found only a redlink on the National Register of Historic Places listings in Alameda County, California. So I crafted my first article in December 2013 and learned a lot about the elements and guidelines.
Historians note how previous cultures leave deposits, traces, influences, legacies, or renewable forces that get interwoven into the cultures we now inhabit long after their “decline.”
I started editing when I noticed some errors and gaps in local, mainly historical, information on Wikipedia. I noticed that editors had started stubs so that every entry at List:National Register of Historic Places had an article. I then found out that a great way to learn about local history is to expand those stubs. I am a newspaper reader and often come upon articles that would provide some historical information for an article.
While I am mainly interested in expanding existing articles on historical places, my List of Subpages will show the articles in draft or final that I have created. I have also contributed photos that you can see at WikiMedia Commons.
Historic preservation can be assisted by the availability of quality articles with appropriate Wikilinks and References. I have been improving articles by promoting consistency, correcting errors, putting links in articles, and adding additional information about notable and historic landmarks. My interest is to improve individual articles and provide improved access by linking articles together and making the relationships more evident for easier research. I am always happy to have other users edit my text for clarity and concision. Editing Wikipedia is something this user does for a hobby.
I also started contributing photos when needed. Several of my photos are on this page and all the photos I have contributed into the Public Domain can be viewed at WikiMedia Commons.
Some of my favorites are historic site stubs and populated places. City articles are sometimes a list of notable residents with some folk knowledge thrown in. I especially enjoy writing after stumbling onto a surfeit of references though crafting a good article takes time.
Somis, California - This article was full of unrelated but plausible text cut and pasted from other articles. Had to just about start over but the research was interesting.
Anaheim Regional Transportation Intermodal Center - When this new terminal was ready to open, I took a stub and expanded it to a fairly complete article on this dynamic, new transit center that is destined to become a local landmark. The research was interesting because each source only had a limited amount of information and the article was criticized for relying too much on primary sources.
I am enjoying expanding the articles that others have started from these lists. As part of county history, they often show the early days of the settlements that turned into the cities listed below.
I want to better understand categories and which places are on which lists so I have organized them here for quick reference. The redlinks indicate ones that might be good to create and populate.
The County and all cities are listed below but there are three other classifications and some landmarks may be associated these settlements
Category:Populated places - USGS Geographic Names Information System(GNIS) defines Populated Place as place or area with clustered or scattered buildings and a permanent human population (city, settlement, town, village). A populated place is usually not incorporated and by definition has no legal boundaries. However, a populated place may have a corresponding "civil" record, the legal boundaries of which may or may not coincide with the perceived populated place. (Distinct from Census and Civil classes.)