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Wikipedia:WikiProject History of Science/Humphry Davy Edit-a-thon - 4 May 2017

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About the event

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  • Are you interested in history, literature, science, or technology?
  • Would you like to help Lancaster University researchers improve the quality of information available online?
  • Do you have a laptop or tablet?

If so, join our free Humphry Davy Wikipedia Edit-a-thon

Humphry Davy (1778-1829) was one of the most famous scientific figures of his day, best known for experimenting with nitrous oxide (laughing gas), discovering several chemical elements, and inventing a miners’ safety lamp that revolutionised industry. But did you know that he was also a friend of Byron, Coleridge, and Wordsworth, and a poet himself?

Much of Wikipedia’s information about Davy needs to be improved – and you can help us achieve this! Learn new skills and meet new people during our free Wikipedia edit-a-thon. We’ll train you in how to edit a Wikipedia page, give you all the information about Davy that you’ll need, and will even provide a free lunch. We can also give you a free certificate after the event. All you need to do is bring a computer.

Professor Sharon Ruston, of the Department of English and Creative Writing, Lancaster University, is one of the co-editors of The Collected Letters of Sir Humphry Davy, which will be published by Oxford University Press in 2018.

Places are free, but limited. If you wish to attend, please reserve your place here.

How do I prepare?

Participants

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Add your Wikipedia username below.

  1. User:Mark L MacDonald
  2. User:Aplacey
  3. User:Sharonruston
  4. User:Anoucks.
  5. User:JNwah
  6. User:pigmint
  7. User:Harrietnewnes 
  8. User:HPLane
  9. User:Pashcroft93
  10. User:Stephen Pumfrey
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Resources

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Potential topics, selected resources, and other useful resources

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Topics

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If you intend to work on a topic listed below, please sign your name next to it. Where discussion of a topic already exists on Davy's page, a link to the relevant section is provided. During the edit-a-thon, you may wish to expand these existing sections, paste your draft edit into a different section, or create a new section of your own.

  1. Davy's early life (Humphry Davy#Education, apprenticeship and poetry)Harrietnewnes (talk) 10:28, 4 May 2017 (UTC)[reply]
  2. Davy's poetry (the Annual Anthology poems and 'Life') (Humphry Davy#Education, apprenticeship and poetry) (User:JNwah)
  3. Davy at the Medical Pneumatic Institution (Humphry Davy#Pneumatic Institution)
  4. Davy's involvement with Lyrical Ballads and William Wordsworth (Humphry Davy#Pneumatic Institution) Sharonruston (talk) 11:08, 4 May 2017 (UTC)[reply]
  5. Davy isolates potassium, sodium, and boron (Humphry Davy#Discovery of new elements)
  6. Davy isolates magnesium, calcium, strontium, and barium (Humphry Davy#Discovery of new elements) Pashcroft93 (talk) 10:30, 4 May 2017 (UTC)[reply]
  7. Davy demonstrates chlorine to be an element (Humphry Davy#Discovery of chlorine) User:aplacey
  8. Davy's European travels c. 1814 (Humphry Davy#European travels) HPLane (talk) 10:34, 4 May 2017 (UTC)[reply]
  9. Davy demonstrates iodine to be an element (Humphry Davy#European travels)
  10. Davy's work on the safety lamp, and the ensuing controversy 1 (Humphry Davy#Davy lamp)Pigmint (talk) 10:33, 4 May 2017 (UTC)[reply]
  11. Davy's work on the safety lamp, and the ensuing controversy 2 (Humphry Davy#Davy lamp)
  12. Davy's work on Herculaneum papyri Anoucks. (talk) 10:29, 4 May 2017 (UTC)[reply]
  13. Davy's Presidency of the Royal Society (Humphry Davy#Last years and death)Stephen Pumfrey (talk) 10:41, 4 May 2017 (UTC)[reply]
  14. Davy's work on the electrochemical protection of ships' copper bottoms User:aplacey
  15. Davy's later life (Humphry Davy#Last years and death)

Selected resources

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  • Amin, Wahida (2013). The Poetry and Science of Humphry Davy (PDF) (Unpublished PhD thesis, University of Salford, UK).
  • Faraday, Michael (1991). Bowers, Brian; Symons, Lenore (eds.). Curiosity Perfectly Satisfyed: Faraday's Travels in Europe, 1813-1815. London, UK: Peregrinus. ISBN 9780863412349.
  • James, Frank A. J. L. (1992). "Davy in the Dockyard: Humphry Davy, the Royal Society and the Electro-chemical Protection of the Copper Sheeting of His Majesty's Ships in the mid 1820s". Physis. 29: 205–25.
  • Ruston, Sharon (2013). Creating Romanticism: Case Studies in the Literature, Science and Medicine of the 1790s. Basingstoke, UK: Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 978-1-137-26428-2.

Other useful resources

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Articles that were created and/or improved during the edit-a-thon

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During the event the article on Humphry Davy increased from 43 kilobytes (kb) to 64 kb, so increasing by roughly 50% of its original size. Here is a breakdown of some of the larger changes:

  1. Humphry Davy - Section on the Davy lamp expanded by Pigment
  2. Humphry Davy - Paragraph on Davy's involvement with Lyrical Ballads added by Sharonruston
  3. Humphry Davy - Paragraph on Davy's poetry was added by JNwah
  4. Humphry Davy - Section on Herculaneum papyri was created by Anoucks.
  5. Herculaneum papyri - Paragraph on Davy's involvement was added by Anoucks.
  6. Humphry Davy - Section on European Travels expanded with references added by HPLane
  7. Humphry Davy - Mention of poems for Anna Beddoes added, with references by Sharonruston
  8. Humphry Davy - Section on protection of ships' copper bottoms created by Aplacey
  9. Humphry Davy - Section on Davy's early life was expanded and improved by Harrietnewnes
  10. Humphry Davy - Paragraph on nitrogen trichloride accident was expanded and referenced by HPLane
  11. Humphry Davy - Section on his presidency of the Royal Society was created by Stephen Pumfrey
  12. Humphry Davy - Section on discovering and isolating elements was expanded by Pashcroft93

Feedback

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