Talk:Eurasian Plate - Wikipedia
11 people in discussion
Article ImagesI think that whoever wrote this needs to do a better job on explaining because this is not clear at all!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
- Hello, welcome to Wikipedia! We welcome your contributions. Wikipedia is a wiki, and anyone- including you! - can edit nearly any article, at any time, by clicking the Edit This Page link at the bottom of the article. You don't even need to login, although there are several reasons why you might want to. So, feel free to be bold and make this correction yourself! If you are unsure about how to edit a page, try out the Sandbox to test your editing skills. - Fennec 03:17, 26 Apr 2004 (UTC)
- Eurasian Plate → Eurasian plate
- North American Plate → North American plate
- Juan de Fuca Plate → Juan de Fuca plate
- Farallon Plate → Farallon plate
- South American Plate → South American plate
- Gorda Plate → Gorda plate
- Nazca Plate → Nazca plate
- Antarctic Plate → Antarctic plate
- Pacific Plate → Pacific plate
- Cocos Plate → Cocos plate
- Philippine Sea Plate → Philippine Sea plate
- African Plate → African plate
- Arabian Plate → Arabian plate
- Indo-Australian Plate → Indo-Australian plate
- Explorer Plate → Explorer plate
- Anatolian Sub-Plate → Anatolian sub-plate
- Australian Plate → Australian plate
- Burma Plate → Burma plate
- Indian Plate → Indian plate
- Scotia Plate → Scotia plate
- Caribbean Plate → Caribbean plate
- Somali Plate → Somali plate
- Kula Plate → Kula plate
- Sunda Plate → Sunda plate
- Tonga Plate → Tonga plate
- Adriatic Plate → Adriatic plate
- Izanagi Plate → Izanagi plate
- Phoenix Plate → Phoenix plate
- Intermontane Plate → Intermontane plate
- Bellingshausen Plate → Bellingshausen plate
- Insular Plate → Insular plate
- Baltic Plate → Baltic plate
- Charcot Plate → Charcot plate
- Rivera Plate → Rivera plate
- South Sandwich Plate → South Sandwich plate
- Solomon Sea Plate → Solomon Sea plate
- New Hebrides Plate → New Hebrides plate
- Banda Sea Plate → Banda Sea plate
- Timor Plate → Timor plate
- Aegean Sea Plate → Aegean Sea plate
- Balmoral Reef Plate → Balmoral Reef plate
- Caroline Plate → Caroline plate
- Conway Reef Plate → Conway Reef plate
- Futuna Plate → Futuna plate
- Juan Fernández Plate → Juan Fernández plate
- Kermadec Plate → Kermadec plate
- Manus Plate → Manus plate
- Maoke Plate → Maoke plate
- Mariana Plate → Mariana plate
- Molucca Sea Plate → Molucca Sea plate
- Niuafo'ou Plate → Niuafo'ou plate
- North Andes Plate → North Andes plate
- North Bismarck Plate → North Bismarck plate
- Okinawa Plate → Okinawa plate
- Panama Plate → Panama plate
- Shetland Plate → Shetland plate
- South Bismarck Plate → South Bismarck plate
- Halmahera Plate → Halmahera plate
- Woodlark Plate → Woodlark plate
- Yangtze Plate → Yangtze plate
- Madagascar Plate → Madagascar plate
- Greenland Plate → Greenland plate
- Moa Plate → Moa plate
- Pelso Plate → Pelso plate
- Tisza Plate → Tisza plate
- Sangihe Plate → Sangihe plate
- Lwandle Plate → Lwandle plate
- Capricorn Plate → Capricorn plate
- Rovuma Plate → Rovuma plate
- Malpelo Plate → Malpelo plate
- Coiba Plate → Coiba plate
- Moesian Plate → Moesian plate
- Trobriand Plate → Trobriand plate
- Kshiroda Plate → Kshiroda plate
– Sources usually use lowercase plate for these (I have checked many, including all the major plates, e.g. using books n-grams, but not yet all 74). I think the minor and micro plates should just follow for consistency, unless someone finds one or more that are consistently capped in sources. Dicklyon (talk) 22:43, 6 October 2024 (UTC)Reply
- I believe "Plate" should remain capitalized in the article titles, such as "Eurasian Plate" or "North American Plate," in accordance with Wikipedia:Manual of Style § Proper names versus generic terms. These terms refer to specific, formal names of geological entities, where capitalization is standard practice. Their names are proper nouns, much like how we capitalize the word "ocean" in "Atlantic Ocean". The word "Plate" is an integral part of these names, not a generic descriptor, and therefore warrants capitalization.
- Since you brought up Atlantic Ocean, look at n-gram stats for that. That's how sources treat proper names. Compare with any of the plate names, and you'll see they are not at all like that. Dicklyon (talk) 06:21, 9 October 2024 (UTC)Reply
- Furthermore, scientific literature and authoritative sources in geology overwhelmingly capitalize the word "plate" when referring to specific tectonic plates (see this book for example). Lowercasing it would not only depart from Wikipedia's style guidelines but also from widely accepted conventions in academic and educational contexts. AstrooKai (Talk • Contributions) 04:33, 8 October 2024 (UTC)Reply
- Astroo, I don't know where you're getting your impression of "overwhelmingly capitalize", but it's amusing that the one book you cite consistently uses lowercase "plate" in the figure labels, but uppercase in the caption. Like what GeoWriter is worried about, but in the other direction. I don't think it ruins the book, but does call into question their assessment of what's a proper name. Dicklyon (talk) 06:11, 9 October 2024 (UTC)Reply
- Oppose these proposed renames/moves. I agree with the 04:33, 8 October comments of User:AstrooKai. The Google Books ngram analysis does not consider enough context. I could write factually correct statements such as "The Eurasian Plate is one of Earth's largest plates" (in which "Plate" is part of a proper noun and therefore capitalised) but I could also write factually correct statements such as "Eurasian plate boundaries are divergent, convergent or transform" (in which "plate" is an adjective describing boundaries; it is not a part of a proper noun and not capitalised). Also, many images of plates in Wikimedia Commons/Wikipedia have the plate name as e.g. "African Plate" not "African plate" so I think that an unnecessary and difficult-to-fix inconsistency would be created if plate names were changed from e.g. "African Plate" to "African plate" in article text. GeoWriter (talk) 12:35, 8 October 2024 (UTC)Reply
- True, the n-grams don't tell the whole story. It's always a good idea to search and see what uses you can find of the identified phrase. Doing that, I didn't see any uses of "Eurasian plate" referring to anything but the Eurasian plate. I'm not saying that none exist, just that there aren't enough to have much effect on the n-gram stats. The thing about over-capitalization in figure labels is widespread in Wikipedia, but is not really a problem; we fix what we can and don't bother so much about what we can't fix. Currently, the worst inconsistency is that certain things are presented in title and text as proper names when reliable sources don't really support that interpretation. You can see what I mean by taking an n-gram link like this one and putting different plate names in. Dicklyon (talk) 05:02, 9 October 2024 (UTC)Reply
- For a specified search term, an Ngram search gives a count of all found sources but it does not differentiate between reliable sources, unreliable sources, contextually relevant and contextually irrelevant. For example, a search result for "African plate" that could have been found in a book about African culture or art such as a text fragment stating "... the exquisitely painted African plate, made of clay, from the 17th century ..." would be a false positive that is irrelevant to the context of plate tectonics. You seem to think that such false positives would be so few and far between that they can be dismissed because they would not affect the overall result. I disagree because I think that we do not know how many false positives are found by Ngram. This suggests to me that Ngram search results are of unknown quality, which does not seem to be a good basis to make such a wide ranging change to Wikipedia. Also, in the course of this discussion, your assertion seems to have moved from most sources use "plate" not "Plate" - when you wrote "Sources usually use lowercase plate" (for which you have shared Ngram search results) to claiming that most reliable sources use "plate" not "Plate", (which I doubt can be proved by Ngram) when you later wrote "certain things are presented in title and text as proper names when reliable sources don't really support that interpretation" . I am not aware of any way to evaluate the reliability of large quantities of books in Google Books. I do not regard the likes of e.g. a travel book written by an expert on Italian tourist sights that mentions the "Eurasian plate" [1], that will have been included in the "plate" count by Ngram, as a reliable source for influencing whether or not Wikipedia should use "Eurasian Plate" or "Eurasian plate". Ngram analysis can be useful in some ways but it cannot tell us if "plate" or "Plate" is used more frequently in reliable sources.
- For comparison, Ngrams show "sun" is more frequent than "Sun" [2], "moon" is more frequent than "Moon" [3], "earth" is more frequent than "Earth" [4], but Wikipedia uses Sun, Moon and Earth.
- Moving on to another problem that affects attempts to assess the reliability of allegedly reliable sources: in my experience, the grammatical awareness and vocabulary of many earth scientists are not as consistent as they should be. I have often found that some authors, including some experts, will use "plate" and "Plate" (as well as uppercase/lowercase versions of many other technical terms) interchangeably in the same book, article, paragraph or sentence, i.e. these authors either don't know or don't care about consistency or accuracy. They are entitled to do this but it does not help us to resolve this issue in Wikipedia. There is an argument for "if some experts don't know or don't care, why should Wikipedia care?", in which case I think the simplest solution is to retain the current uppercase versions of plate names. GeoWriter (talk) 18:52, 9 October 2024 (UTC)Reply
- Leaning oppose, in agreement with comments by AstrooKai and GeoWriter above. I would want to a see a lot more evidence in context to support this big of a change. BD2412 T 15:59, 8 October 2024 (UTC)Reply
- I can work on that. Hold on... Dicklyon (talk) 05:02, 9 October 2024 (UTC)Reply
- See if the subsection I added below helps. Maybe I should have started proposing just the major ones, for a simpler discussion. But the evidence seems pretty clear, or at least I'm unable to find any that look like they should are treated as proper names, per the criterion in MOS:CAPS. Dicklyon (talk) 06:04, 9 October 2024 (UTC)Reply
- Oppose, I suppose geographical features have always been Proper Nouns unlike say... sports tournaments or government ministries and offices. Howard the Duck (talk) 02:41, 9 October 2024 (UTC)Reply
- But source stats don't align with your supposition. Dicklyon (talk) 05:02, 9 October 2024 (UTC)Reply
- Howard the Duck quacks wisdom here. Randy Kryn (talk) 11:41, 9 October 2024 (UTC)Reply
- But source stats don't align with your supposition. Dicklyon (talk) 05:02, 9 October 2024 (UTC)Reply
- Comment I am reserving my decision pending more complete evidence - even a somewhat random sample. But the arguments made so far to oppose the move are not particularly convincig. While specificity is a property of a proper noun|name, it is not a defining property since specificity can be achieved by use of the definite article (the), with or without the addition of modifiers (such as Eurasian). Wikipedia:Manual of Style § Proper names versus generic terms is telling us not to cap school and university in the example
the high school is near the university
, even though we are referring to a specific school and university. The question here is whether these plates are proper names that are consistently capped in sources in the same way as Pacific Ocean (here) or Stanford University (here). If the ngram for Eurasian plate is indicative, then clearly not. Whether the example phrase given aboveEurasian plate boundaries are divergent ...
is parsed as Eurasian plate-boundaries or Eurasian-plate boundaries is debatable. If the former is intended, it should probably be written as the Eurasia plate boundaries. Ngrams can be contexturalised (eg here). It is clearly indicating that the term is far from being consistently capitalised. Cinderella157 (talk) 02:48, 9 October 2024 (UTC)Reply - Oppose, in accordance with proper names of major Earth-structures per WP:CONSISTENCY and WP:COMMONSENSE. For example, the North American Plate is obviously a "thing", a stand-alone single object, like the Moon and the Sun. Wikipedia uppercases proper names of oceans, rivers, canyons, seas, mountain ranges, and structures such as the San Andreas Fault. All the n-grams in the world can't deny the fact that the Earth's plates have been located, defined, and mapped as distinctive properly named features of the planet. Having recently completed a large uppercase run of these plates I can attest that they are real, solid, and encyclopedically covered as stand-alone extremely large objects (the very definition of something with a proper name). Do we need to ignore the n-grams in order to maintain encyclopedic commonsense? Certainly. Randy Kryn (talk) 11:37, 9 October 2024 (UTC)Reply
- Oppose per above. Volcanoguy 15:28, 9 October 2024 (UTC)Reply
- Oppose: Per above. The below section of ngrams are not useful, as ngrams for names with common nouns are typically, time and time again, quite inaccurate and lack meaningful context. Hey man im josh (talk) 16:13, 9 October 2024 (UTC)Reply
- Oppose: Per above. Also, I completely agree about ngrams being useless as evidence in this case . Paul H. (talk) 16:40, 9 October 2024 (UTC)Reply
- Oppose. There are plenty of legitimate phrasings that will undercase "plate" next to one of these words. More importantly, I checked with a geologist friend of mine, and he says that "Plate" is capitalized. We should trust the authorities on the matter. SnowFire (talk) 21:45, 9 October 2024 (UTC)Reply
More source n-gram stats
- Here's a comparison of some of the most commonly occurring plate names in books, according to n-grams.
- I made up this bunch of n-gram URLs in a text editor, and haven't visited many of them yet, but in the process I noticed that sometimes it's instructive to have the context of "the" in front and/or "*" after, and sometimes the minor ones don't have enough book hits to show up with context (and some even not enough to show up with no context). Anyway, help me look at these and see if there's any hint of "consistently capitalized" as MOS:CAPS asks. Dicklyon (talk) 05:26, 9 October 2024 (UTC)Reply
- Eurasian Plate/plate – Eurasian Plate/plate * – the Eurasian Plate/plate – the Eurasian Plate/plate *
- North+American Plate/plate – North+American Plate/plate * – the North+American Plate/plate – the North+American Plate/plate *
- Juan+de+Fuca Plate/plate – Juan+de+Fuca Plate/plate * – the Juan+de+Fuca Plate/plate – the Juan+de+Fuca Plate/plate *
- Farallon Plate/plate – Farallon Plate/plate * – the Farallon Plate/plate – the Farallon Plate/plate *
- South+American Plate/plate – South+American Plate/plate * – the South+American Plate/plate – the South+American Plate/plate *
- Gorda Plate/plate – Gorda Plate/plate * – the Gorda Plate/plate – the Gorda Plate/plate *
- Nazca Plate/plate – Nazca Plate/plate * – the Nazca Plate/plate – the Nazca Plate/plate *
- Antarctic Plate/plate – Antarctic Plate/plate * – the Antarctic Plate/plate – the Antarctic Plate/plate *
- Pacific Plate/plate – Pacific Plate/plate * – the Pacific Plate/plate – the Pacific Plate/plate *
- Cocos Plate/plate – Cocos Plate/plate * – the Cocos Plate/plate – the Cocos Plate/plate *
- Philippine+Sea Plate/plate – Philippine+Sea Plate/plate * – the Philippine+Sea Plate/plate – the Philippine+Sea Plate/plate *
- African Plate/plate – African Plate/plate * – the African Plate/plate – the African Plate/plate *
- Arabian Plate/plate – Arabian Plate/plate * – the Arabian Plate/plate – the Arabian Plate/plate *
- Indo-Australian Plate/plate – Indo-Australian Plate/plate * – the Indo-Australian Plate/plate – the Indo-Australian Plate/plate *
- Explorer Plate/plate – Explorer Plate/plate * – the Explorer Plate/plate – the Explorer Plate/plate *
- Anatolian Sub-Plate/sub-plate – Anatolian Sub-Plate/sub-plate * – the Anatolian Sub-Plate/sub-plate – the Anatolian+Sub-Plate/sub-plate *
- Australian Plate/plate – Australian Plate/plate * – the Australian Plate/plate – the Australian Plate/plate *
- Burma Plate/plate – Burma Plate/plate * – the Burma Plate/plate – the Burma Plate/plate *
- Indian Plate/plate – Indian Plate/plate * – the Indian Plate/plate – the Indian Plate/plate *
- Scotia Plate/plate – Scotia Plate/plate * – the Scotia Plate/plate – the Scotia Plate/plate *
- Caribbean Plate/plate – Caribbean Plate/plate * – the Caribbean Plate/plate – the Caribbean Plate/plate *
- Somali Plate/plate – Somali Plate/plate * – the Somali Plate/plate – the Somali Plate/plate *
- Kula Plate/plate – Kula Plate/plate * – the Kula Plate/plate – the Kula Plate/plate *
- Sunda Plate/plate – Sunda Plate/plate * – the Sunda Plate/plate – the Sunda Plate/plate *
- Tonga Plate/plate – Tonga Plate/plate * – the Tonga Plate/plate – the Tonga Plate/plate *
- Adriatic Plate/plate – Adriatic Plate/plate * – the Adriatic Plate/plate – the Adriatic Plate/plate *
- Izanagi Plate/plate – Izanagi Plate/plate * – the Izanagi Plate/plate – the Izanagi Plate/plate *
- Phoenix Plate/plate – Phoenix Plate/plate * – the Phoenix Plate/plate – the Phoenix Plate/plate *
- Intermontane Plate/plate – Intermontane Plate/plate * – the Intermontane Plate/plate – the Intermontane Plate/plate *
- Bellingshausen Plate/plate – Bellingshausen Plate/plate * – the Bellingshausen Plate/plate – the Bellingshausen Plate/plate *
- Insular Plate/plate – Insular Plate/plate * – the Insular Plate/plate – the Insular Plate/plate *
- Baltic Plate/plate – Baltic Plate/plate * – the Baltic Plate/plate – the Baltic Plate/plate *
- Charcot Plate/plate – Charcot Plate/plate * – the Charcot Plate/plate – the Charcot Plate/plate *
- Rivera Plate/plate – Rivera Plate/plate * – the Rivera Plate/plate – the Rivera Plate/plate *
- South+Sandwich Plate/plate – South+Sandwich Plate/plate * – the South+Sandwich Plate/plate – the South+Sandwich Plate/plate *
- Solomon+Sea Plate/plate – Solomon+Sea Plate/plate * – the Solomon+Sea Plate/plate – the Solomon+Sea Plate/plate *
- New+Hebrides Plate/plate – New+Hebrides Plate/plate * – the New+Hebrides Plate/plate – the New+Hebrides Plate/plate *
- Banda+Sea Plate/plate – Banda+Sea Plate/plate * – the Banda+Sea Plate/plate – the Banda+Sea Plate/plate *
- Timor Plate/plate – Timor Plate/plate * – the Timor Plate/plate – the Timor Plate/plate *
- Aegean+Sea Plate/plate – Aegean+Sea Plate/plate * – the Aegean+Sea Plate/plate – the Aegean+Sea Plate/plate *
- Balmoral+Reef Plate/plate – Balmoral+Reef Plate/plate * – the Balmoral+Reef Plate/plate – the Balmoral+Reef Plate/plate *
- Caroline Plate/plate – Caroline Plate/plate * – the Caroline Plate/plate – the Caroline Plate/plate *
- Conway+Reef Plate/plate – Conway+Reef Plate/plate * – the Conway+Reef Plate/plate – the Conway+Reef Plate/plate *
- Futuna Plate/plate – Futuna Plate/plate * – the Futuna Plate/plate – the Futuna Plate/plate *
- Juan+Fernández Plate/plate – Juan+Fernández Plate/plate * – the Juan+Fernández Plate/plate – the Juan+Fernández Plate/plate *
- Kermadec Plate/plate – Kermadec Plate/plate * – the Kermadec Plate/plate – the Kermadec Plate/plate *
- Manus Plate/plate – Manus Plate/plate * – the Manus Plate/plate – the Manus Plate/plate *
- Maoke Plate/plate – Maoke Plate/plate * – the Maoke Plate/plate – the Maoke Plate/plate *
- Mariana Plate/plate – Mariana Plate/plate * – the Mariana Plate/plate – the Mariana Plate/plate *
- Molucca+Sea Plate/plate – Molucca+Sea Plate/plate * – the Molucca+Sea Plate/plate – the Molucca+Sea Plate/plate *
- Niuafo'ou Plate/plate – Niuafo'ou Plate/plate * – the Niuafo'ou Plate/plate – the Niuafo'ou Plate/plate *
- North+Andes Plate/plate – North+Andes Plate/plate * – the North+Andes Plate/plate – the North+Andes Plate/plate *
- North+Bismarck Plate/plate – North+Bismarck Plate/plate * – the North+Bismarck Plate/plate – the North+Bismarck Plate/plate *
- Okinawa Plate/plate – Okinawa Plate/plate * – the Okinawa Plate/plate – the Okinawa Plate/plate *
- Panama Plate/plate – Panama Plate/plate * – the Panama Plate/plate – the Panama Plate/plate *
- Shetland Plate/plate – Shetland Plate/plate * – the Shetland Plate/plate – the Shetland Plate/plate *
- South+Bismarck Plate/plate – South+Bismarck Plate/plate * – the South+Bismarck Plate/plate – the South+Bismarck Plate/plate *
- Halmahera Plate/plate – Halmahera Plate/plate * – the Halmahera Plate/plate – the Halmahera Plate/plate *
- Woodlark Plate/plate – Woodlark Plate/plate * – the Woodlark Plate/plate – the Woodlark Plate/plate *
- Yangtze Plate/plate – Yangtze Plate/plate * – the Yangtze Plate/plate – the Yangtze Plate/plate *
- Madagascar Plate/plate – Madagascar Plate/plate * – the Madagascar Plate/plate – the Madagascar Plate/plate *
- Greenland Plate/plate – Greenland Plate/plate * – the Greenland Plate/plate – the Greenland Plate/plate *
- Moa Plate/plate – Moa Plate/plate * – the Moa Plate/plate – the Moa Plate/plate *
- Pelso Plate/plate – Pelso Plate/plate * – the Pelso Plate/plate – the Pelso Plate/plate *
- Tisza Plate/plate – Tisza Plate/plate * – the Tisza Plate/plate – the Tisza Plate/plate *
- Sangihe Plate/plate – Sangihe Plate/plate * – the Sangihe Plate/plate – the Sangihe Plate/plate *
- Lwandle Plate/plate – Lwandle Plate/plate * – the Lwandle Plate/plate – the Lwandle Plate/plate *
- Capricorn Plate/plate – Capricorn Plate/plate * – the Capricorn Plate/plate – the Capricorn Plate/plate *
- Rovuma Plate/plate – Rovuma Plate/plate * – the Rovuma Plate/plate – the Rovuma Plate/plate *
- Malpelo Plate/plate – Malpelo Plate/plate * – the Malpelo Plate/plate – the Malpelo Plate/plate *
- Coiba Plate/plate – Coiba Plate/plate * – the Coiba Plate/plate – the Coiba Plate/plate *
- Moesian Plate/plate – Moesian Plate/plate * – the Moesian Plate/plate – the Moesian Plate/plate *
- Trobriand Plate/plate – Trobriand Plate/plate * – the Trobriand Plate/plate – the Trobriand Plate/plate *
- Kshiroda Plate/plate – Kshiroda Plate/plate * – the Kshiroda Plate/plate – the Kshiroda Plate/plate *
- The best and required response to all of the above: WP:IAR. Maintaining the proper and encyclopedic names of the largest structures on the planet (aside from the core and the mantle)? A classic "case" of why the policy exists. Randy Kryn (talk) 11:50, 9 October 2024 (UTC)Reply