Russian battleship Slava (nom), launched in 1903, played important roles in suppressing the Sveaborg Rebellion of Russian soldiers in 1906, rescuing survivors of the 1908 Messina earthquake, and resisting the German navy in World War I (Sturmvogel 66).
Wotton railway station (nom), the story of a station built in 1871 on a private horse-drawn tramway as part of the Duke of Buckingham's "increasingly harebrained scheme to provide a mass-transit service to an area populated almost exclusively by cows" (Iridescent).
Minnie Pwerle (nom) (1915–2006), an Indigenous Australian artist whose much-sought-after work was characterised by a "spontaneous" style, typified by bold and vibrant colour executed with great freedom (Hamiltonstone).
Transandinomys (nom), a genus of two long-whiskered, medium-sized rice rats from Central and South America (Ucucha).
Walter Bache (nom), a 19th-century English pianist and conductor who was a prominent student of Franz Liszt (Jonyungk).
Choice of the week.The Signpost asked featured article review delegate Dana boomer to select her best of the week. "I chose Walter Bache. Featured articles on classical music are rather few and far between, and I found this one to be a fascinating read. I’ve never studied the classical composers and artists, and so to learn more about them, and be routed to such articles as War of the Romantics, was quite fun."
List of Digimon video games (nom). The Digimon series revolves around the eponymous Digimon creatures and their human "Tamers", who both serve as player and non-player characters depending on the game (Tezero).
Choice of the week.Staxringold has written 26 featured lists, mostly on the subject of baseball. Here is his pick: "Much as I might like to go with a baseball list, my choice has to be List of volcanoes in the Hawaiian – Emperor seamount chain. The nominators went through three FLCs, grinding out all the little details for this in-depth, very nice list covering the chain of volcanoes near the Hawaiian archipelago. Dynamic lists are never easy to pull off, and Mario and Awickert did a great job."
Thrissops formosus (nom), a fossil of the extinct fish Thrissops from the Jurassic and Cretaceous periods. The reviewers were all enthusiastic; Greg L pointed out how rare it is to find "so much soft tissue fossilized—and with so much fossil/matrix color differentiation; that is just awesome", and that "the lighting angle is great and the resolution is very high". (Created by H. Zell.)
Chicago Theatre (nom), A HDR image of Chicago Theatre. After debate about several "ghosted" people at the bottom, these digital processing flaws were carefully removed by the creator Daniel Schwen. (below)
Liftoff Space Shuttle Atlantis (nom) A HD video of the liftoff of Space Shuttle Atlantis in STS-132—the last scheduled flight of Atlantis before its scheduled retirement. The promotion of this video (with several low-resolution options) required the creation of a new template {{FPlowres}}, since policy states we should link low-resolution video to pages, but have links to the high-resolution versions in the caption for people with higher-bandwidth Internet connections (created by NASA) (top).
Martyrdom of Joseph and Hiram Smith in Carthage Jail, June 27th, 1844 (nom), an unusual lithograph that mixes one colour and black. There was some discussion about its historical accuracy. Restorer Adam Cuerden said the original was so big it took three hours to crop, rotate, and adjust the colour. "Ground my system to a halt, and I have a reasonably good computer. Mind you, I also spent three hours cleaning up the blank border surrounding the image – and maybe an hour or two on the image itself.... every slight smudge shows on blank paper (created by G. W. Fasel and Charles G. Crehen; published by Nagel & Weingaertner).
Choice of the week. We asked JovanCormac, a member of the Organising Committee for the Commons Picture of the Year, to choose his number-one for the week: "Picking this week's standout was an easy choice: This NASA film of Atlantis taking off is simply one of the best videos in our library. Shot in impeccable 1080i full HD quality, it shows details I'd never seen before from the liftoff. Even though from a technical viewpoint it's just as easy to include videos in articles as it is to embed pictures, in my opinion there is still not nearly enough video footage on Wikipedia; in particular, videos are often overlooked in the featuring process. The newly featured video gives me hope that this might improve in the future, confirms NASA's status as one of the foremost contributors of public domain material, and is a jewel in our slowly but steadily growing collection of commercial-quality encyclopedic footage." (top)
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Thanks Star. (can't think of anything else to say). ResMar 03:13, 10 August 2010 (UTC)[reply]