1277:,) from Fernando de Noronha" that was "presented by the Lords of the Admiralty, from H. M. S. Chanticleer." This appears to be the specimen referred to by Gray in 1839. (The alternative possibility that HMS Chanticleer returned to Fernando de Noronha after 1831 to collect an additional skink for the British Museum collection seems pretty slim.) It's not a massively significant event in the species' 9-million-year history, but this was the type specimen, so maybe it's worth a note.
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1381:(p476) that adds a little here. Ridley remarks on species presumed to have rafted to the islands and says that "almost all the species noted occur on all the islands suitable for their existence." He specifically mentions the presence of the skink on St. Michael's Mount (Ilha Sela Gineta). There seems to have been some text omitted, which makes it unclear whether the skink was also present on Rat Island (Ilha Rata).
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1430:"The Skink was originally described from two specimens obtained on Fernando Noronha by HMS 'Chanticleer,' but has since been recorded from Demerara. The specimens brought home by Mr. Ridley are 10 in number; two have 36 scales round the body, the others 38; in one specimen the frontonasal touches the rostral and in another the two shields form a narrow suture."
1250:
were indicated.In the “habitat” section, there seems to be some sources indicated in parentheses , but were not linked. I made some extra changes like moving reproduction-related sections under the reproduction heading. I also reworded the "Interactions with Humans" section to make the writing less subjectie.
1426:
The last half of that is quite confusing as to which species are present where. Sadly, the skink doesn't get nearly as much detail in the formal description of the reptile fauna that Ridley got G A Boulenger to write as do most of the other species Ridley brought back (probably because it had already
1126:
I'm sorry that my comments were not of much utility and that one of them appeared rude. I had not looked your at user page or contribs while perusing this article for improvements. Its now obvious to me that you have a lot more experience than me in developing articles towards FA/GA. All the best for
1040:
IMHO there are far too many red links. These should be reduced by making stubs or redirects. The stubs too should not be trivial but contain at least one ref, preferably an image and at least one paragraph of text with three four sentances explaining what that stub title is about. While the FA rules
671:
No one really talks about the other islands. Most studies were explicitly conducted on the main island. The only exception I think is
Branner 1888, who says mice are plentiful on Ilha Rapta (the largest islet) but there are not rats. Unfortunately, he doesn't mention whether the skink also occurs on
1352:
It's interesting that the
Chanticleer probably collected its skink specimen in the summer of 1830, about a year and a half before Charles Darwin visited Fernando de Noronha (20 February 1832). This 1832 visit was by the HMS Beagle because the HMS Chanticleer wasn't in seaworthy condition following
1249:
I really enjoyed reading this wikipedia page, I thought the writing was very engaging. However, I would suggest looking over at the citations in conservation, habitat and reproduction. Information included on
Knowledge pages should generally be sourced. In reproduction and conversation, no sources
1234:
The article is plentiful with images, which is great! I rewrote some lines within "Reproduction" to enhance clarity. I also modified a few sentences within "Relationships with other species." I renamed "Interaction between lizards" to "Intraspecific
Competition." "Relationships with other species"
763:
All I have about this is
Schmidt 1945: "In addition to the type specimens collected by H.M.S. Chanticleer sometime previous to 1838, the specimens on record include only ..." and Mausfeld and Vrcibradic 2002, who tell us that the types are BMNH 1946.8.27.47 and 1946.8.27.48. Gray himself is silent
1396:
I can't see that paper now (Google Books only shows a snippet). According to
Branner (1888), "Ilha Rata" is actually "Ilha Rapta" and means "Stolen Island", not "Rat Island". There is an incredible number of mice there, but no rats. He doesn't mention the skink on any but the main island.
942:(which reached mainland America from Africa) and the Noronha skink. You probably have access to the paper, so you might want to have a look. It might be best to take the thing out--it's the only numeric estimate of the skink's age I know of, but it's perhaps too vague to be useful.
1178:
I tried to access this on my mobile, from which I can usually read the first paragraph. I learned nothing. It would be nice, especially with featured articles, to have a lead paragraph that gives stubstantive information rather than speculates and follows up with nothing.
553:
in the second paragraph of description, before jumping head-first into an explanation of scale morphology, maybe an introductory sentence explaining to the reader how scales are an important character used to distinguish between different species (I'm assuming they are)
1235:
was a subheading under diet; as such, I corrected it to a heading of the same level and renamed it to "Predators and
Parasites." All such ecological sections, I moved underneath "Ecology and Behavior." I moved "Origin" to "Discovery and taxonomy" as a subheading. ----
1449:
Thanks. Yes, whether one sees a full view in Google Books depends on location; it's related to differences in copyright law. It's a pity the text of your first quote is mangled; I think I'll just add that it also occurs on the smaller islands of the archipelago.
608:
Looks like it is nearly an FA already, to me. Is it found on the smaller
Noronha islands? The lead says endemic to an island, and no further mention is made in the text of distribution, but the distribution map caption mentions the archipelago.
875:"During foraging, it spends less than 30% of its time moving on average." versus "Its prey is mostly mobile, rather than sedentary, which is consistent with the relatively high proportion of time spent moving." contradiction, no?
423:
HMS Chanticleer is a ship. :) I linked it, and also
Tschudi in the text. For the others, I don't feel it is necessary to link them, since they are likely not notable. This is similar to what is done in literature FAs like
954:
I am bringing the article to FAC now; most of your comments appear to have been resolved, and aided greatly in improving the article. I'm sure we'll be able to sort out the remaining points, either here or at the FAC.
1409:"Another fact of interest in connection with this sea-travelling fauna, if I may use the expression, is that almost all the species noted occur on all the islands suitable for their existence. Thus on Rat Island the
1096:
Nothing more than what is already in the article. There have been quite some articles about the
Noronha skink in recent years, but knowledge has become somewhat unbalanced, as almost no one has studied any aspect of
827:"In 2002, P. Mausfeld and D. Vrcibradic published a note on the nomenclature of the Noronha skink and re-examined Gray's original type specimens;" didn't they examine the specimens before they published the note?
1041:
may not require it, a reader is not reassured by the presence of red links, once he understands what a red link means. Also, developing the 'supporting cast' for FAs and GAs is a great way to build up Knowledge.
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760:"…based on two specimens collected by HMS Chanticleer before 1838" how does a boat collect specimens? Why mention the boat? Was this skink discovery a result of some historically important scientific voyage?
719:
As it turned out, someone had already uploaded an image of the flowers to Commons. The picture is in Brisbane, but the tree looks close to the pictures in Sazima et al. 2005, so the ID is probably correct.
1478:
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The Chanticleer arrived back in England in May 1831, which fits nicely with the British Museum donation year and the list of other specimens and collection sites provided in the British Museum list.
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496:, with the colon in between to indicate that they did not create a fully new name (basionym in ICBN-ese, I think). What about introducing a footnote to the synonyms section that explains this?
1001:
Don't bother. Done. Converted the Indeterminate green links in Checklinks as they are most likely to deteriorate over time. All are white (good) or yellow (subscription required) links now.
1054:
Please provide an external links where the entry on Noronha Skink in ITIS, GBIF and other online global species indices. Oh, dont forget the Wikispecies entry! Make one if you need to.
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1406:
Hmm, Google Books is happy to expand the search snippets to full text for me. Maybe they're restricting visibility based on the searcher's geo-location. Here's the most relevant part:
1353:
its previous survey voyage. Darwin spent a few hours on Fernando de Noronha, remarked on the geology and collected botanical specimens, but he doesn't seem to have noticed the skinks!
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899:(Rocha et al., 2009, p. 456). They write: "Thus, T. atlantica should be considered closer to the active foraging extreme of the active-sedentary foraging continuum" (p. 456).
749:
does not italicize "nomen novum", and there are many scientific journals which direct writers not to italicize "et al.". I generally prefer not to use unnecessary formatting.
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suggests that a well-developed article may not need such a section. In any case, most of the terms you mention are already linked in the article (I added "colonization").
912:"The colonization from Africa is believed to have occurred within the last 9 million years." please mention how they derived this number (molecular clock calculations?)
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In the first paragraph of description, suggest varying the sentence structure a bit, as currently most sentences being with "the", and it is a little repetitive.
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For those three, I intentionally used the present instead of the past tense, because the conclusion is still true (the skink is still a distinctive species,
818:"He also placed Mabouya punctatissima and Trachylepis (Xystrolepis) punctata Tschudi, 1845, described from Peru, as synonyms of this species." placed -: -->
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You'd be surprised. The paper gives some other numbers, and 30% is actually high. Some lizards have proportions of time spent moving as low as 5%.
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I notice there was some discussion before FAC about whether the skink is present on the islets around Fernando de Noronha. There's a reference in
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and Skink are common on St Michael's Mount; the Skink is a large species, but the island, being a mere rocky peak, is unsuited for the
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Sure, an explanatory footnote would be nice, and will help dissuade those future editors who may come and "help" by removing them :)
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taxonomic history has been complex, riddled with confusion with Trachylepis maculata and other species, homonyms, and other problems
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The reference to Demerara matches Boulenger's equation of this species with Mabuia/Trachylepis maculata in your other reference.
1044:
You do not have to teach me how to write an article. I will be working on these links, but am primarily developing this articles.
936:
It's not really clear. The 9 Ma age is mentioned fairly laconically by Carranza and Arnold, and actually refers to both true
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No mention of conservation status, threats and action. Even if it is not in danger, some specific mention should be made.
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about the provenance of his specimens. I suppose the ship's crew caught a few skinks, but even that is not in the source.
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Good idea. It seems herpetologists are obsessed with scales the same way mammalogists are obsessed with skulls and teeth
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Nothing is known that is not in the article. The article already mentions that it is very common; more I cannot say.
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of HMS Chanticleer's voyages, it appears the specimen was likely collected between the following recorded stops.
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External links should only be made when they add something for the reader, and I don't think any of these do.
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is still preoccupied ). But the more I think about it, the more that seems artificial, so I changed them.
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I'll leave more comments in a day or two, just need to get more than a 10-minute stretch of free time :)
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1160:... and interesting topic. However, could the lead be used to describe what this is, rather than, "
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Please do give specific examples; I'd like to have as much of that as possible resolved before FAC.
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on Knowledge. If you would like to participate, please visit the project page, where you can join
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who is H.M.S. Chanticleer? L.G. Andersson?… and all of the other scientists that are unlinked
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Thanks. I see your point, and I have swapped the two paragraphs of the lead to remedy it.
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The enigmatic Trachylepis tschudii, supposedly from Peru, may well be the same species.
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A few indeterminate ones need replacing/refreshing. Will do them later if nobody does.
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Maybe the lead could be a little longer, another sentence of description and taxonomy?
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Thanks for the detective work; it appears you are right. The only discrepancy is that
362:. If you would like to participate, you can choose to edit this article, or visit the
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prose needs some massaging throughout for better flow, but it's pretty close already
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The link would not add anything, as all photos but one are already in the article.
631:
Thanks; I'll bring it to FAC soon after Sasata has left another round of comments.
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does not need ending period. Or replace the comma with "is" and keep the period.
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List of Additions Made to the Collections in the British Museum in the Year 1831
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Please add a commons link to "Mabuya maculata" as the photos are stored there.
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was first used by Mausfeld et al. 2002, who transferred the Noronha skink from
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suggest tweaking image placement so that they don't push in level two headers
690:"It is a brownish to grayish lizard…" - shouldn't start a paragraph with "it"
583:
Good luck at FAC, I'm sure I'll find some more to comment about at that time!
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802:"…conclusion that maculata and punctata of Gray are not the same" are -: -->
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561:(garbled sentence). The introductory sentence is helpful, and I added it.
810:"considered both of Gray's names as identical" identical or synonymous?
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link/define mottled. Is it mottled yellow below, or just yellow below?
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I tend to see these as terms of art rather than just Latin words. The
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I linked it; do you think that suffices? The first sentence of
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the first sentence of "19th Century" is long and feels run-on
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No problem, and thanks again for taking the time to comment.
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Did you know ... that reports of "lizards with two tails" on
984:
I'd be happy to do that myself, but please be more specific—
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Just yellow. I'll see what I can do to improve that piece.
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Knowledge Did you know articles that are featured articles
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Featured articles that have appeared on the main page once
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only records a single specimen, but in fact Gray had two.
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FA-Class amphibian and reptile articles of Low-importance
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Ridley's 1887 paper in the Journal of the Linnean Society
1047:
I did not intend to be rude. My apologies if you felt so.
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HMS Chanticleer collection appears to be 1831 or earlier
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It is a new combination. For example, the combination
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Featured articles that have appeared on the main page
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the other islands. I made it just say "island" now.
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what does the colon mean after a synonym (taxobox)?
256:, a collaborative effort to improve the coverage of
59:This article appeared on Knowledge's Main Page as
1210:Thanks. Nice article, including the lead, now. --
120:A fact from this article appeared on Knowledge's
806:"…point that punctata is preoccupied" is -: -->
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372:Knowledge:WikiProject Amphibians and Reptiles
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1524:WikiProject Amphibians and Reptiles articles
375:Template:WikiProject Amphibians and Reptiles
43:. Even so, if you can update or improve it,
39:as one of the best articles produced by the
33:; it (or a previous version of it) has been
1117:Thanks for your comments; I replied above.
712:might it be worthwhile to add a picture of
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1303:Cape of Good Hope 25 Oct 1829 Refitting.
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1093:Is any material on breeding available?
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1062:A 'See also' is usually a good thing.
731:I'm used to putting Latin words like
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1373:Skink distribution on Noronha islets
1082:could be some of the links therein.
250:This article is within the scope of
351:WikiProject Amphibians and Reptiles
193:It is of interest to the following
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443:junior synonym needs explanation
1166:first formally described in 1839
1162:Perhaps seen by Amerigo Vespucci
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294:This article has been rated as
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887:Addendum: the lowest value in
535:I was able to trim it further.
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492:. They get the authority for
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268:and see a list of open tasks.
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274:Knowledge:WikiProject Brazil
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141:The text of the entry was:
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448:Synonym (taxonomy)#Zoology
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1427:been described by Gray).
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716:? There's some on Flickr
597:Thanks for the comments!
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862:Moved that around a bit.
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369:Amphibians and Reptiles
323:Amphibians and Reptiles
151:may have been based on
1076:Colonisation (biology)
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366:for more information.
155:Trachylepis atlantica
813:Synonymous. Changed.
704:Trachylepis tschudii
654:No need to rush. :)
530:Trachylepis maculata
450:is quite clear here.
427:Ode on a Grecian Urn
1080:Island biogeography
830:I hope so. Changed.
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438:True. Fixed.
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364:project page
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195:WikiProjects
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45:please do so
34:
26:
1419:Amphisbaena
1415:Amphisbaena
915:—Preceding
891:is 1.4% in
889:Trachylepis
819:considered
744:zoological
733:nomen novum
348:is part of
1468:Categories
1086:WP:SEEALSO
897:T. sulcata
838:Explained.
356:amphibians
160:(pictured)
132:column on
36:identified
1237:Spirit LG
1127:the FAC.
685:(Round 2)
122:Main Page
1252:Nvytrinh
929:contribs
917:unsigned
846:Changed.
822:Changed.
789:punctata
785:punctata
781:maculata
693:Changed.
622:Contribs
612:innotata
570:Changed.
490:Euprepis
415:Comments
360:reptiles
185:FA-class
102:Promoted
1275:Tiliqua
1064:Reptile
546:Edited.
396:on the
298:on the
147:in the
124:in the
80:Process
1452:Ucucha
1413:, the
1399:Ucucha
1337:Ucucha
1203:Ucucha
1143:Ucucha
1129:AshLin
1119:Ucucha
1104:AshLin
1068:Lizard
1003:AshLin
994:Ucucha
971:AshLin
957:Ucucha
944:Ucucha
939:Mabuya
921:Sasata
901:Ucucha
880:Ucucha
793:Ucucha
766:Ucucha
751:Ucucha
722:Ucucha
674:Ucucha
656:Ucucha
642:Sasata
599:Ucucha
585:Sasata
507:Sasata
486:Mabuya
461:Sasata
271:Brazil
258:Brazil
214:Brazil
191:scale.
83:Result
1172:. ...
1072:Skink
737:et al
519:Done.
29:is a
1441:talk
1387:talk
1359:talk
1319:talk
1283:talk
1269:The
1256:talk
1241:talk
1133:talk
1108:talk
1007:talk
990:this
988:and
986:this
975:talk
925:talk
870:Yes.
803:were
783:and
776:was
746:Code
735:and
646:talk
618:Talk
589:talk
511:talk
465:talk
358:and
260:and
77:Date
807:was
488:to
388:Low
290:Low
1470::
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1389:)
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1258:)
1243:)
1218:|
1187:|
1179:--
1135:)
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1078:,
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609:—
587:(
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400:.
302:.
197::
162:?
138:.
130:"
126:"
47:.
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