Wikipedia:MOUNTAINS

Wikipedia:WikiProject Mountains

Wikipedia:WikiProject Mountains


Welcome to WikiProject Mountains.

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Mountains
Silvretta panorama from the Ochsenkopf

First, an important note for everyone to remember: A few Wikipedians have gotten together to make some suggestions about how we might organize data in articles about mountains. These are only suggestions, things to give you focus and to get you going, and you shouldn't feel obligated in the least to follow them. But if you do not know what to write or where to begin, following the below guidelines may be helpful. Mainly, we just want you to write articles!

Scope

This WikiProject aims to expand and improve articles on mountains and hills and topics related to them, such as mountaineering and rock climbing.

Portal

The main portal for this project is Portal:Mountains from which there are numerous links to relevant articles, grouped by subject, as well as features such as Picture of the Month. The shortcut for the portal is P:MTN.

Parentage

The parent of this WikiProject is WikiProject Geography.

Descendant Wikiprojects

Similar Wikiprojects

Agenda

Participants

More information User, Areas of interest ...

Inactive/Alumni

More information User, Last edit ...

Our content

Cerro Azul (Chile volcano) · Hoodoo Mountain · Level Mountain · Mauna Kea · Mauna Loa · Metacomet Ridge · Mono-Inyo Craters · Mount Cayley volcanic field · Nevado del Ruiz · Payún Matrú · The Volcano (British Columbia)

Good articles

Amak Volcano · Ben Nevis · Eldgjá · Gerlachovský štít · Glacier Peak · Hualālai · Huangshan · Independence Pass (Colorado) · Kohala (mountain) · Lastarria · Licancabur · Mentolat · Mont Aiguille · Monte Burney · Montpelier Hill · Mount Adams (Washington) · Mount Baker · Mount Bailey (Oregon) · Mount Cleveland (Alaska) · Mount Edziza volcanic complex · Mount Elbert · Mount Garibaldi · Hakkōda Mountains · Mount Hood · Mount Kenya · Mount Rainier · Mount Redoubt · Mount Tehama · Mount Thielsen · Mount Vesuvius · Nevado de Longaví · Ollagüe · Parinacota (volcano) · Pinkham Notch · Purico complex · Roxy Ann Peak · Silverthrone Caldera · Wells Gray-Clearwater volcanic field · Wilkins Peak · Yamsay Mountain

Articles by popularity

Article alerts

Featured article candidates

Good article nominees

Articles to be split

Articles for creation

  • 14 Apr 2024 Draft:Mount Drury (talk · edit · hist) has been submitted for AfC by EditorNumber27 (t · c)
  • 03 Apr 2024 Draft:Mont-Avalanche (talk · edit · hist) has been submitted for AfC by Nicolas Pellemans (t · c)
  • 01 May 2024 Draft:Guy Waterman (talk · edit · hist) submitted for AfC by Boingit (t · c) was accepted to Guy Waterman (talk · edit · hist) by Lettler (t · c) on 02 May 2024
  • 18 Apr 2024 Draft:Mission Peak (Washington) (talk · edit · hist) submitted for AfC by RunsWithScssors (t · c) was declined by Samoht27 (t · c) on 30 Apr 2024
  • undated Draft:Colin William Wyatt (talk · edit · hist) submitted for AfC was declined by ToadetteEdit (t · c) on 29 Apr 2024

Structure

A template will provide a common set of features on a mountain organized into a consistent format. The template will include an infobox, that contains the following attributes:

  • name of the mountain/peak
  • elevation, in both metres and feet. Metres should be listed first except for mountains in the United States, where feet is given first. The international spelling of metres should be used for non-USA mountains (versus the American spelling "meter").
  • latitude and longitude
  • mountain range in which the peak is located within
  • date of first ascent
  • difficulty of easiest ascent (e.g. snow/ice climb, scramble, hike)
  • topography map reference (e.g. 83E/03)
  • picture(s) and caption. The caption should include month and year if known.

The body of the article should try to provide the following information:

  • history of the mountain, including how it received its name
  • geology
  • trail head and approach routes
  • timeline of ascents if it is a major mountain of the world; for example, any of the eight-thousanders.
  • detailed information on the first ascent including party members and nationality
  • common climbing routes (and grade)

After creating an article, add it to the relevant section on List of mountains by elevation. If there is an article containing a list of mountains for that country to which the mountain belongs, also add the new entry to that list (e.g. List of mountains in Canada, List of mountains of the United States).

Categorization

If an article is added to the project, please also add it to one of the mountain categories: e.g. Category:Mountains of Canada, Category:Mountains of France, Category:Mountains of the United States. Also consider adding a link to the article to the appropriate list article, such as List of mountains of the United States, Canada, etc.

If a country specific mountains category does not exist, then add it to one of the continent specific categories such as Category:Mountains of Europe or Category:Mountains of Asia. If those are not applicable, then add it to Category:Mountains. For a country that does not have a specific category yet, the general rule is to create a category for the country only when the number of existing mountain articles is five or more.

Category:Mountains

For a fully expanded list or if JavaScript is not enabled, see /Categories.

Hierarchy Definition

No classification of Mountains has been defined. Possible future possibilities could be by continent or major mountain chains.

General Strategy and Discussion forums

Templates

Quick Facts Mount Baker, Highest point ...

There is one infobox that makes any mountain infobox: {{Infobox mountain}}. See an example, right, of the use of the template. This template has three required parameters:

  • Name
  • Elevation (metric units first, but US customary units first for peaks in the USA). For conversions use {{convert}} or use one of the following automatic conversion parameters.
    • Elevation_m for conversion from metres to feet
    • Elevation_ft for conversion from feet to metres
  • Location (State/Province, then country).

It has many optional parameters:

More information Parameter, Description ...


Copy and paste a sample infobox from any of the following links to get started:

The previous multi-template is no longer used.

For a list of articles using it, see Wikipedia:WikiProject Mountains/List of mountains

Assessment template

Talk pages of articles about mountains are encouraged to use {{WikiProject Mountains}}. The talk pages that do use this template are at pages linking to template.

NOTE: An older redireect to this template {{Mountain}} should not be used on new talk pages.

For lists, see Wikipedia:WikiProject Mountains/Assessment

Related, specialised infobox

Hills in Great Britain often come with multiple named summits. For this situation, there are two specialized templates:

Mountain Pass infobox

Usage is nearly identical to that of {{Infobox mountain}}, though there are fewer fields (see the template page for more details).

Please add {{Mountain Pass}} to the talk page.

Mountain Range infobox

See the template page for list of fields.

Citation templates

All good articles must have reliable sources and mountain articles are certainly no exception. Key information in the infobox, including elevation, prominence, coordinates, first (recorded) ascent, last eruption (for volcanoes) should have cited sources. Some of the common sources used now have citation templates to make it easier to cite them as a source. At present, the following citation templates are available:

Userboxes

More information Code, Result ...


Barnstar

The Mountainous Barnstar
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Measurement units

All nations, including the United States, now use SI units for geodetic measurements. Modern elevation measurements reference a geoid rather than sea level (since the oceans are now known to have their own highs and lows.) It is therefore no longer appropriate to append "above sea level" to elevation measurements.

When giving elevation, prominence, or isolation in the United States, please use "feet" or "miles" first followed by "meters" or "kilometers" in parentheses. For all other peaks, please reverse the order: metric first, then imperial in parentheses. For mountains of the United States, use the American spelling "meters" while for all other mountains use the international spelling "metres".

Consider using the {{convert}} template to automatically convert units and avoid conversion errors. For example, for Mount Elbert using {{convert|14439.6|ft|0}} will produce 14,439.6 feet (4,401 m). This template has a more extra options that can be used to control whether the units are wiki-linked or abbreviated. See Template:Convert for detailed instructions and Template:Convert/list of units for a list of units that can be used. Template:epi can be used to construct sortable tables displaying elevation, topographic prominence, and topographic isolation.

Please read WP:UNITS for more information from the Wikipedia Manual of Style

U.S. vertical datum

In 1991, the United States converted from the National Geodetic Vertical Datum of 1929 (NGVD 29) to the North American Vertical Datum of 1988 (NAVD 88) for vertical control of the 48 contiguous states. Please see NGVD 29 and NAVD 88 and Height Conversion. Unfortunately, the elevation of most summits in the United States still reference the NGVD 29. This results in a vertical error of as much as 2.5 metres (8 feet), most noticeably in the Rocky Mountains. Elevations referencing NGVD 29 should be converted to NAVD 88 using the VERTCON orthometric height convertor.

Naming conventions

See also: Wikipedia:Naming conventions (landforms)

Articles should be named according to the most common name for a mountain. If alternate names exist, mention them in the article and create redirects for them to prevent duplicate articles. "Mount" will always be expanded in the article name. For example, Mount Logan and not [[Mt. Logan]]. A redirect for "Mt. <name>" should be created to prevent duplicate articles. "Mount" should not be used just to disambiguate the article if it is not normally part of the mountain's name.

If a mountain name is not unique, the convention is to create a disambiguation page for the mountain. Then, all mountains by that name will be disambiguated by putting the political division name of the mountain in parenthesis after the mountain name. For example, Mount Columbia exists in both Alberta, Canada and Colorado, United States. The disambiguated pages are subsequently named: Mount Columbia (Canada) and Mount Columbia (Colorado).

Some mountains/peaks have the same name in the same political division. For example, Granite Peak has been given to over 40 peaks in the United States alone with it existing multiple times within certain states. In this case, the naming convention is to add a distinguishing sub-classification of the political division. For example, in the United States, one would also add the county name: e.g. Brown Peak (Kern County, California). When this situation occurs as it does for Granite Peak and Brown Peak, the standard infobox template will not be used. Instead, a table listing the peak names and unique geographical information will be used. See Granite Peak and Brown Peak for examples of this table. Articles that contain these lists should include the template {{mountainindex}} at the bottom, to place them into the correct category.

If a mountain crosses multiple states/provinces within a country or more than one country, the disambiguated name should use the mountain range instead. For example, Mount Quincy Adams (Fairweather Range) which is on the Canada/United States border.

Some names refer to both a set of mountains, and possibly other non-mountain articles. In this case, please create two articles: a standard disambiguation article that follows the standard Manual of Style (WP:MOSDAB), and a different article that contains just the list of mountains with the same name. This other article should be titled "List of peaks named XXXXX" where XXXXX is the common name of the peak. The disambiguation article should refer to the list article. For example, see Mount Wilson and List of peaks named Mount Wilson.

  • Gallery of mountains contains a gallery of photos used by the project's articles. After adding a new picture, also consider adding it to this page.

Resources

Some useful resources for information on mountains:

Obsolete resources:

  • Peakware - Owner stopped updates in May 2020. Any existing references in articles have been preserved via archive.org but this website should no longer be added for new references.

Government sources


Notes

  1. This source is reliable only for latitude, longitude, elevation, prominence. It is an "unreliable source" for range definitions, unnamed/unofficial name designations and other material and is often at odds with official definitions.

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This article uses material from the Wikipedia article Wikipedia:MOUNTAINS, and is written by contributors. Text is available under a CC BY-SA 4.0 International License; additional terms may apply. Images, videos and audio are available under their respective licenses.