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Add to a Wikipedia article on Wikipedia: William Mulholland
While working as a common laborer tending ditches, Mulholland's hard work, positive work attitude, and great mental capacity earned him recognition and promotion. One day the president of the Los Angeles City Water Company noted his hard work and upon approaching him Mulholland responded by saying "It's none of your damned business!" little did he know the man asking him was the president of the company he worked for and instead of being fired, Mulholland was promoted to foreman.[1]
- ^ Hundley, Jr., Norris (2001). The Great Thirst. Berkeley 94720: University of California Press. pp. 142–143. ISBN 9780520224568.
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Evaluate Wikipedia article: Canal
- Everything in this article is relevant to the topic however modules where disorganized and could have been arranged better, for example the history section is towards the bottom of the article instead of the top the reason why I feel this should be at the top is because often time when looking for an article in Wikipedia we want to know about the history right away and this article detracts from that in which history usually appear at the top of the article usually the second paragraph.
- This article does appear to be neutral and it is very thorough which is important for informative purposes
- The viewpoints overrepresented are those that show historical aspects of canals under the history section, the area that is more undeveloped is that which talks about the different types of Canals
- Some of the links on the citations do not work for example the link that directs me to the national parks service in reference to Lowell National Historical Park.Although most citations are properly referenced
- Each fact is referenced with reliable references and much of the information in this article comes from books and other scholarly sources therefore much of the information is content neutral
- The majority of the bibliographies are outdated with dates ranging from the 1980s as far back as the 1960s, only one was from 2004 which could be improved
- The talk page contains mostly information about edits that have been made particularly external sources.
- This article is listed as a level 3- vital article and is rated as C-class, Is it a part of Wikiproject Civil Engineering, Wikiproject Technology, Wikiproject Waterways, and Wikipedia Version 1.0 Editorial team/ vital
- Wikipedia discusses this article in a way that is very thorough and gives ample examples including the types of canals and historical developments as well as uses for canals
Add an image to a Wikipedia article: Noordhollandsch Kanaal (North Holland Canal)
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information to be added to existing article:
Great Fergana Canal
[edit]From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
-The canal was completed in a little as forty-five days.
-The Great Fergana Canal was built by the former Soviet Union in efforts to establish agricultural independence primarily from the western cotton market. This irrigation project successfully resulted in massive crop production and led to a density in population growth for the Central Asian region through industrial settlement in the valley.[1]
-The canal has over 1,000 hydrotechnical plants located along the waterway and over 50 of those are significantly important.[2]
-The ecological effects brought forth by the Great Fergana Canal contributed to the desiccation of the Aral Sea.
In Film
[edit]-Russian screenwriters Pyotr Pavlenko and Sergei Eisenstein wrote a script portraying the history and construction of the Fergana Canal. The script is written as a triptych and begins with an introduction of the violent sacking of Urgench during the 14th century, the second section portrays the riots and the struggle for water access in the valley, and ends with the construction of the canal.[3]
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What the article looks like after adding EVEN MORE INFORMATION TO MY SECTION!! (Only content originally in the article is in BOLD , the rest is my new content added including the map created by me and all of the section headings):
[edit]The Great Fergana Canal ( /fergana kənæl/ ; Russian:Ферганский канал, Tajik: Фарғона Канал, Uzbek: Fargʻona Kanali, Arabic: قناة فرغانة) is an irrigation canal located on the Fergana Valley between Uzbekistan and Tajikistan in Central Asia. The project was constructed in 1939 by 160,000 Uzbek and Tajik collective farm workers from the former Soviet Union and was completed in forty-five days. The canal is 270 kilometers long with over 1,000 hydrotechnical plants located along the waterway, 50 of which are known to be significantly important.[4]
History
[edit]For many centuries prior to Soviet control of the region, water in Central Asia belonged to feudal-bey landlords who made living conditions for peasants in the region harsh; citizens lived in thirst, hunger and poverty and this forced many to flee from the area. The revolution allowed for a reformation of social and economic relations in Central Asia and for all citizens in the region.
On September 17 1939, the Pravda Vostoka announced Central Asia’s dream of obtaining water a reality though the construction of the Great Fergana Canal. Usman Yusupov, the First Secretary of Central Asian Committee of the Communist Party of Uzbekistan announced that Soviet villages would no longer have a hauz, where drinking water had worms, but would instead have more efficient drainage canals that would prosper the region. The Soviet government along with the expansion of transportation infrastructure and Uzbek soviet citizens who invested in the region transformed a once dry Russian colony into a lively flowering valley that would also serve as a center for Soviet life. The canal symbolized the progress of the union and announced the Soviet Union’s future prosperity of the region, it also served example of care and guidance from the Stalinist state towards Central Asian citizens into modern age and socialism.[5]
The ecological effects brought forth by the Great Fergana Canal are in responsible for the desiccation of the Aral Sea in addition to the Karakum Canal. [6][7]
Uses
[edit]The main purpose for the canal was to irrigate the cotton fields of the Fergana Valley by the waters of Syr Darya River in efforts to establish agricultural independence from the western cotton market, other crop yields also include vegetables and wheat.
In 1940–41, the Northern and Southern Fergana canals were also constructed. As a result, the water supply to the irrigation systems of the valley increased considerably, as did the area irrigated, and the cotton harvest doubled.[8] This irrigation project successfully resulted in massive crop production and led to population increase in the Central Asian region due to industrial settlement in the valley.[9] The canal alone irrigates about 39 percent of the land in the Fergana Valley.[10]As of 2008 the Southern Fergana Canal was undergoing technical and infrastructure repair from deterioration in efforts to conserve water from poor distribution and retention. The canal is expected to have automation that would enable computerized control of canal gates in addition to data acquisition and communication.[11]
In Media/Film
[edit]The construction of Fergana Canal was in the focus of many prominent representatives of the Photography in Uzbekistan such as Max Penson and other Soviet photographers like Mikhail Grachev.
Russian screenwriters Pyotr Pavlenko and Sergei Eisenstein wrote a script portraying the history and construction of the Fergana Canal. The script is written as a triptych and begins with an introduction of the violent sacking of Urgench during the 14th century, the second section portrays the riots and the struggle for water access in the valley, and ends with the construction of the canal.[12]
References
[edit]- ^ "Start of the construction of Great Fergana Canal | Environment & Society Portal". www.environmentandsociety.org. Retrieved 2018-05-02.
- ^ Bolshoi Fergana Canal. (n.d.) The Great Soviet Encyclopedia, 3rd Edition. (1970-1979). Retrieved May 3 2018 from https://encyclopedia2.thefreedictionary.com/Bolshoi+Fergana+Canal
- ^ Pavlenko, P., Eisenstein, S., & Taylor, R. t. (2011). The Great Fergana Canal. Studies In Russian & Soviet Cinema, 5(1), 123-155.
- ^ Bolshoi Fergana Canal. (n.d.) The Great Soviet Encyclopedia, 3rd Edition. (1970-1979). Retrieved May 27 2018 from https://encyclopedia2.thefreedictionary.com/Bolshoi+Fergana+Canal
- ^ Stronski, Paul. Tashkent : Forging a Soviet City, 1930-1966, University of Pittsburgh Press, 2014. ProQuest Ebook Central, https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/csupomona/detail.action?docID=2039319.
- ^ "Great Fergana Canal". Seventeen Moments in Soviet History. 2015-06-18. Retrieved 2018-05-27.
- ^ Thompson. "The Aral Sea Crisis". www.columbia.edu. Retrieved 2018-05-27.
- ^ Bolschoi Fergana Canal. In: Great Soviet Encyclopedia. A translation of the third edition. Vol. 3. Macmillan Inc. New York, Collier Macmillan Publishers London, 1974–1983, p. 438 (Online version at thefreedictionary.com).
- ^ "Start of the construction of Great Fergana Canal | Environment & Society Portal". www.environmentandsociety.org. Retrieved 2018-05-27.
- ^ Bolshoi Fergana Canal. (n.d.) The Great Soviet Encyclopedia, 3rd Edition. (1970-1979). Retrieved May 27 2018 from https://encyclopedia2.thefreedictionary.com/Bolshoi+Fergana+Canal
- ^ "Ferghana Valley Canal Automation Project". www.cawater-info.net. Retrieved 2018-06-01.
- ^ Pavlenko, P., Eisenstein, S., & Taylor, R. t. (2011). The Great Fergana Canal. Studies In Russian & Soviet Cinema, 5(1), 123-155.