User:J. Johnson/Sandbox1
Testing different displays for special cases
[edit]- Watters, Thomas R. (1989), "Periodically spaced anticlines of the Columbia Plateau", in Reidel, S. P.; Hooper, P. R. (eds.), Volcanism and Tectonism in the Columbia River Flood-Basalt Province, vol. Special Paper 239, Geological Society of America, pp. 283–292. [Using "volume="] ⇐ Preferred.
- Watters, Thomas R. (1989), Reidel, S. P.; Hooper, P. R. (eds.), "Volcanism and Tectonism in the Columbia River Flood-Basalt Province", GSA, Special Paper 239, Geological Society of America: 283–292
{{citation}}
:|contribution=
ignored (help). [Using "volume=" and "journal= GSA"]
- Watters, Thomas R. (1989). "Volcanism and Tectonism in the Columbia River Flood-Basalt Province" (Document). Geological Society of America. pp. 283–292.
{{cite document}}
: Unknown parameter|contribution=
ignored (help); Unknown parameter|editor1-first=
ignored (help); Unknown parameter|editor1-last=
ignored (help); Unknown parameter|editor2-first=
ignored (help); Unknown parameter|editor2-last=
ignored (help); Unknown parameter|volume=
ignored (help) [Cite, using "id="]
- Watters, Thomas R. (1989), "Periodically spaced anticlines of the Columbia Plateau", in Reidel, S. P.; Hooper, P. R. (eds.), Volcanism and Tectonism in the Columbia River Flood-Basalt Province, Geological Society of America, pp. 283–292, Special Paper 239. [Using "id="]
maps
[edit]At one point using volume= with journal= put the map name in bold. Not currently.
- Barnett, Elizabeth A.; Sherrod, Brian L.; Norris, Robert; Gibbons, Douglas (2013), "Paleoseismology of a newly discovered scarp in the Yakima fold-and-thrust belt, Kittitas County, Washington", United States Geological Survey, Scientific Investigations Map 3212, 1 sheet, scale1:100,000x. [Using "journal=", "volume="] ⇐ Preferred **
- Barnett, Elizabeth A.; Sherrod, Brian L.; Norris, Robert; Gibbons, Douglas (2013), Paleoseismology of a newly discovered scarp in the Yakima fold-and-thrust belt, Kittitas County, Washington, vol. Scientific Investigations Map 3212, United States Geological Survey, 1 sheet, scale 1:100,000x. [Using "publisher=", "volume="]
Using id= for map name puts after the descriptive details in at=. Not good.
- Barnett, Elizabeth A.; Sherrod, Brian L.; Norris, Robert; Gibbons, Douglas (2013), "Paleoseismology of a newly discovered scarp in the Yakima fold-and-thrust belt, Kittitas County, Washington", United States Geological Survey, 1 sheet, scale1:100,000x, Scientific Investigations Map 3212. [Using "journal=", "id="] XX
- Barnett, Elizabeth A.; Sherrod, Brian L.; Norris, Robert; Gibbons, Douglas (2013), Paleoseismology of a newly discovered scarp in the Yakima fold-and-thrust belt, Kittitas County, Washington, United States Geological Survey, 1 sheet, scale 1:100,000x, Scientific Investigations Map 3212. [Using "publisher=", "id="] XX
- Barnett, Elizabeth A.; Sherrod, Brian L.; Norris, Robert; Gibbons, Douglas (2013). Paleoseismology of a newly discovered scarp in the Yakima fold-and-thrust belt, Kittitas County, Washington (Map). United States Geological Survey. 1 sheet. Scientific Investigations Map 3212. [Cite map, using "id=" and "publisher="] **Authors ignored.**
Testing of CITEREF links.
[edit]Smith 2000; Smith 2001 harvnb error: multiple targets (2×): CITEREFSmith2001 (help); Smith 2010;
- Smith, J. (2000). Cite book: w/o ref.
- Smith, J. (2001). Cite book: w ref.
- Smith, J. (2010), Citation book
- Smith, J. (2001). Cite book: w ref.(2).
{{Refbegin}}
Test of brackets in citeref
[edit]Link: Smith 2004
- Smith (2004), Big Book
Link: Brown 2004
- Brown (2004 [revision of 1904 edition]), Another Book
{{citation}}
: Check date values in:|date=
(help)
"a new parameter x=4
"
Test of named refs in reflist
[edit]Link to Smith[1], link to Jones[2], and link to Brown[3]. These are only the named tags, the <ref> tags with the actual content are in the reflist (below). And there they are in alphabetical order, but reflist is assembled in the order the tags are first encountered. Also, additional content in the reflist ("Everley") is ignored.
Test of citation
[edit]Citation templates
[edit]The example above was generated from formatted text like the following (additional linebreaks added for clarity):
Le Treut ''et al.'', [http://www.ipcc.ch/publications_and_data/ar4/wg1/en/ch1.html Chapter 1: Historical Overview of Climate Change Science], [http://www.ipcc.ch/publications_and_data/ar4/wg1/en/ch1s1-3.html#1-3-1 Section 1.3.1: The Human Fingerprint on Greenhouse Gases], in {{Harvnb|IPCC AR4 WG1|2007}}.
An effectively identical[1] citation can be generated using a {{citation}} template[2]:
- Le Treut; et al., "Chapter 1: Historical Overview of Climate Change Science", Section 1.3.1: The Human Fingerprint on Greenhouse Gases
{{citation}}
: Explicit use of et al. in:|author=
(help); Missing or empty|title=
(help) in IPCC AR4 WG1 2007 .
This was generated using the following template (linebreak added):
{{citation |author= Le Treut ''et al.'' |chapter-url= http://www.ipcc.ch/publications_and_data/ar4/wg1/en/ch1.html |chapter= Chapter 1: Historical Overview of Climate Change Science |at= [http://www.ipcc.ch/publications_and_data/ar4/wg1/en/ch1s1-3.html#1-3-1 Section 1.3.1: The Human Fingerprint on Greenhouse Gases] }} in {{Harvnb|IPCC AR4 WG1|2007}}.
Either form is workable, but if an article consistently uses one form then that should be followed (unless consensus is obtained to change). The chapter details for all reports are provided as formatted text. When using with templates be careful to remove extraneous brackets and commas. In all cases remove extraneous linebreaks, And of course Preview your work before saving.
References
* ''[[The New York Times]]'': :*{{Cite news |ref= CITEREFNew York Times, March 29, 2014a |first1= John |last1= Schwartz |date= March 29, 2014a |title= No Easy Way to Restrict Construction in Risky Areas |newspaper= The New York Times |page= A12 |url= https://www.nytimes.com/2014/03/29/us/governments-find-it-hard-to-restrict-building-in-risky-areas.html }} [Other N.Y. Times articles...]
- log ES = 4.8 + 1.5 Ms
- log M0 = 1.5 Ms + 9.1, (3.67)
- Mw = (log M0 – 9.1)/1.5 = (2/3) (log M0 – 9.1) (3.68)
+ mvar: M, M0, M0; M: M0 ; math: M0, M0
+ μ; μ μ 𝜇, 𝜇
+ Overbar: σDS; U: σ̄ σ̅ D̄ D̅; σ̄D̅S; {math} messes with the overbars: σ̄D̅S, σ̄D̄S
- M0 = 1.23 X 1022S3/2 dyn cm
- W = σDS (3)
+ σ ... the stress drop Δσ is equal to 2σ, 2σ̄ 2σ̅ 2σ̄ 2σ̅
- W = W0 = 1/2ΔσDS = (Δσ/2μ)M0 (4)
Since Δσ is nearly constant at 20–60 bars = 2–6 × ×107 dyn/cm2 for very large earthquakes (Figure 1) and μ = 3–6 × ×1011 dyn/cm2 under crust-upper mantle conditions, (Δσ/μ) ~ ×10−4 and (4) becomes
- W0 ~ M0/(2 × ×104) (4')
We let σ0 and σ1 be ...
- W = σ̄D̅S = (Δσ/2)D̅S + σ0D̅S W0 + σ1D̅S (5)
... using the Gutenberg-Richter magnitude-energy relation, log E = 1.5M + 11.8. We use W0 calculated from M0 for E in this equation, calculate M, and denote it by Mw.
As shown in the previous section, W0 = (Δσ/2μ)M0 ... The condition σi ~ σf ...
- 1: W0 = (Δσ/2μ)M0 --[mvar]
- 2: W0 = (Δσ/2μ)M0 --[mvar, {M}]
- 3: W0 = (Δσ/2μ)M0 --[mvar/math]
- 4: W0 = (Δσ/2μ)M0 --[math, 'M']
- 5: W0 = (Δσ/2μ)M0 ; M0 --[{M|0}]
- 6: W0 = (Δσ/2μ)M0 --[sub]
- 7: W0 = (Δσ/2μ)M0 --[ssub]
- Mw = 2/3log10(M0) − 10.7
- Es = Δσ/2𝜇 M0,
- = 1/2 × 104 M0
- Unicode: ࣠ ࣠&#FE00; ࣡ ࣡&#FE00;
- <math>: