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Thanks. — ]&nbsp;{<sup>]</sup><sub style="margin-left:-4.0ex;">]</sub>&nbsp;&ndash;&nbsp;]} 08:50, 15 March, 2009 (UTC)

== Cadastral divisions ==

I just noticed someone has added information and a few articles about the cadastral (property/allotment) divisions in Australia. See ]. I think this falls under the scope of this project and probably should be mentioned here. Also, it would be nice to see project members have a look at these articles in an effort to standardise them and make them more accessible/useful (I never knew they existed).

This came about because a guy in the army was shot in the head last night in a training exercise at a place called Cultana and I couldn't find it on Misplaced Pages. Finally I found it is the name of a hundred (parish) in South Australia. There is an airstrip and army base of some sort there apparently. Consequently I created ]] (which, on reflection, is probably misnamed but that was what the link from ] prescribed to turn the red link blue). Feel free to edit/move/merge to other.

What do you think about these hundreds. Do we need an article on each hundred/parish? Each county? ] (]) 05:46, 21 October 2009 (UTC)
: (Centralised discussion on the same topic at ]) ] 04:56, 23 October 2009 (UTC)

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== Australian places articles have been selected for the Misplaced Pages 0.8 release ==

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For the Misplaced Pages 1.0 editorial team, ] 21:55, 19 September 2010 (UTC)

== Two places with the same name in the same state ==

I don't understand the policy for when there's two places in the same state with the same name: what does "the same method of disambiguation that is used in that state" mean?

Concrete example. In Victoria, there's two Bellfields: Bellfield 3081 in the City of Banyule in Melbourne which is what ] currently talks about, and Bellfield 3381 split between the ] and ]s, in the state's west. Google Maps for and ; search for similar information in and .

So what does the policy say for this? I guess the Grampian Bellfield is not notable enough to get an article—it doesn't look like there's any development there and it's surrounded by a national park. And no-one's tried writing about it yet. But perhaps having a name clash is enough to warrant discussion.

The example given, about ], seems to be completely irrelevant, because no such place exists; instead, there's ] and ], and "Kingston" is just a historical/local name.

—] 19:47, 8 November 2010 (UTC)

: Fwiw, the ABS distinguishes "Bellfield (Grampians)" and "Bellfield (Greater Melbourne)", which seems to be consistent with what we do with rivers like ] and ]. Note that the ABS does not create official names; it just needs unique ones. —] 20:21, 8 November 2010 (UTC)

:: Yup, on the basis of ] up in Mildura and ] this is approximately the right solution. Obviously the idea of using LGAs won't work in all cases—as many localities are split—but the general idea of a mid-level disambiguator is useful. I'm going to update the article page with a practical example, instead of the current irrelevant one. —] 20:49, 8 November 2010 (UTC)

== Merge to WikiProject Australia? ==

WikiProject Australian places is looking a bit too quiet these days. The last talk page activity was in November 2010. What's more, a lot of what should be discussed at this project is being discussed at WikiProject Australia. What do others think of a merger of some sort? <span style="font-family:Papyrus;cursor:help">''''']]'''''</span> 23:00, 7 February 2012 (UTC)

== Requested moves of 30+ Melbourne street names ==

Editors here may be interested in ] that I have initiated. My preamble:
<blockquote>These articles are all concerned with street names in Melbourne. (I would have include another 17, but the template has a limit of 30.) I do not support these moves; but I know that some very active editors do. It is time to air the matter, once and for all. Is it better to have an article on Collins Street in Melbourne called simply ], or to have it called ] as at present? Which option serves the needs of Misplaced Pages's worldwide readership better? In almost all cases that I list there is no content in the destination article, just a redirect. And in almost all cases there is no Misplaced Pages article that very closely resembles the Melbourne-oriented one. There are, for example, no other Collins Streets with their own articles.</blockquote>
Your vote ("Support" or "Oppose") would be welcome, along with your reasons.

<span style="color:blue;"><big>N</big><small>oetica</small></span><sup><small>]</small></sup> 12:35, 17 April 2012 (UTC)

== Lake Tabourie or Tabourie Lake? ==
I have just returned from the lower Shoalhaven in NSW and noticed a lack of coverage on some of the villages down that way so I am endeavouring to add some content (starting with a few photos). The existing stub for ] seems to be incorrectly named. The Shoalhaven City Council refers to it as Tabourie Lake, but the Geographical Names Board website and ABS Statistical divisions list the current naming of the village as "Lake Tabourie". I propose the article title is changed to Lake Tabourie (there is already a redirect from here) and the redirect on Tabourie Lake, unless anybody can provide a definitive answer? I know it is a minor stub, but as someone who grew up in the area calling it Lake Tabourie, it is irritating and incorrect! ] (]) 11:22, 6 April 2013 (UTC)
:The Geographical Names Board lists "Lake Tabourie" as the suburb's name on the Geographical Names Register. The ABS uses Lake Tabourie as well. "Tabourie Lake" is the name of a village in the suburb. There is also a rural place and a lagoon called Tabourie Lake. --] (]) 08:19, 11 January 2014 (UTC)

== Redlinked place names in ] ==

I noticed that some of the station names in ] are redlinks. Perhaps someone familiar with Queensland geography could start articles on them. I created ], but it's just a stub. <span style="font-family:Times;">'''] (] • ])'''</span> 06:52, 1 October 2013 (UTC)

== ] example ==

] is no longer a disambiguation page. Also there can be ambiguity between, for instance, the name of a place and the name of a person. I suggest changing

<code><nowiki>:*Where the town/city name has or is likely to have other uses somewhere else on earth, a link from the appropriate disambiguation page should be made (eg. ] contains a link to ], and ] contains links to several Australian towns).</nowiki></code>

to

<code><nowiki>:*Where the town/city name has or is likely to have other uses, a link from the appropriate disambiguation page should be made (eg. ] contains a link to ], and ] contains links to several Australian towns).</nowiki></code> &mdash;] 00:20, 11 January 2014 (UTC)
:Sigh. No problems with your change (] applies surely?) but why are participants in the US Placenames discussion all of a sudden interested in changing the Australian naming guideline - especially ones who have never shown any interest in Australian topics ever. The Australian project is not a place to fight proxy battles over US placenames. -- ] (]) 00:51, 11 January 2014 (UTC)
::I've changed it. Cheers. &mdash;] 01:17, 11 January 2014 (UTC)

== Comment on the WikiProject X proposal ==

Hello there! As you may already know, most WikiProjects here on Misplaced Pages struggle to stay active after they've been founded. I believe there is a lot of potential for WikiProjects to facilitate collaboration across subject areas, so I have submitted a grant proposal with the Wikimedia Foundation for the "WikiProject X" project. WikiProject X will study what makes WikiProjects succeed in retaining editors and then design a prototype WikiProject system that will recruit contributors to WikiProjects and help them run effectively. Please ''']''' and leave feedback. If you have any questions, you can ask on the proposal page or leave a message on my ]. Thank you for your time! <small>(Also, sorry about the posting mistake earlier. If someone already moved my message to the talk page, feel free to remove this posting.)</small> ] (]) 22:47, 1 October 2014 (UTC)
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== What are the Good Articles? ==

Trying to improve my articles, I thought I would look at the GAs in this field. I see from this page that there are three of them. But I cannot see any way to find out what those articles are, so I can read them. At first I naively thought I could just click on the number "3" in the table and it might show me what made up that count, but no such luck. Can anybody suggest how to find these GAs? If not, are there any generally agreed guidelines, or some known good examples I can look at? --] (]) 01:09, 22 January 2015 (UTC)
: try ] and its subcategories. --] <sup>]</sup> 05:38, 22 January 2015 (UTC)
::] '''Muchas gracias''' - just what I wanted, thanks! --] (]) 08:07, 22 January 2015 (UTC)

== WikiConfererence Australia 2015 - Save the date 3-5 October 2015 ==

Our first Australian conference for Wikipedians/Wikimedians will be held 3-5 October 2015. Organised by ], there will be a 2-day conference (Saturday 3 October and Sunday 4 October) with an optional 3rd day (Monday 5 October) for specialist topics (unconference discussions, training sessions, etc). The venue is the ] in ]. So put those dates in your diary! Note: Monday is a public holiday is some states but not others. Read about it here: ]

As part of that page, there are now sections for you to:
* indicate your interest in possibly attending the conference (this is not a binding commitment, of course)
* add suggestions for topics to include in the conference: what you would like to hear/discuss (again, there is no commit to you presenting/organising that topic, although it’s great if you are willing to do so), or indicate your enthusiasm for any existing topic on the list by adding a note of support underneath it
It would really help our planning if you could let us know about possible attendance and the kind of topics that would make you want to come. If you don’t want to express your views on-wiki, please email me at kerry.raymond@wikimedia.org.au or committee@wikimedia.org.au

We are hoping to have travel subsidies available to assist active Australasian Wikipedians to attend the conference, although we are not currently in a position to provide details, but be assured we are doing everything we can to make it possible for active Australian Wikipedians to come to the conference. ] (]) 00:15, 20 April 2015 (UTC)

:Folks, just letting you know we will not be proceeding with Wikiconference Australia 2015 originally proposed for 3-5 October 2015. Thanks to those of you who expressed your support. You are free to attend the football finals instead :-) ] (]) 07:47, 3 July 2015 (UTC)

== Comleroy, New South Wales ==

Hi! Is ] a (notable) ''place''? - ] (]) 01:17, 28 July 2015 (UTC)
:Hi, You might get more of a response at ] - this project is dormant and used mainly for record keeping and a repository of links. A search of show "Comleroy" listed as an "unofficial" locality. I don't know the place, however. ] may be useful. -- ] (]) 04:23, 28 July 2015 (UTC)

== How to deal with repeated changes that contradict sources ==

I hope you can help me to avoid an edit war. The question concerns ], specifically which region of Sydney it is in. The sources are quite clear that Epping is in ], which means it is included in ]. However, {{u|Spp908}} has persistently removed this from the article. On his/her User Talk page (]), I tried to explain the need for sources to support such a change. I asked him/her to take the issue to the Talk page before making a change. However, the reply consisted of personal opinions only, and the change was made again. This cycle repeated, me asking for sources and Spp908 giving only opinions and personal insults. He/she refuses to provide any sources and refuses to discuss on the Talk page. He/she is a new editor so I don't want to escalate too fast, but I don't want to compromise the article either. I am not sure what more I can do to stabilize the article - can somebody offer a suggestion? --] (]) 14:53, 7 February 2018 (UTC)
:{{ping|Gronk Oz}} I took a look at the article and I see the edit war. But what I don't see is the citation in the article that says anything about what region it is in. I assumed that Spp908 had removed the citation but I don't see it in the last version as edited by you either. So I thought maybe the source is in ] and just needs to be added into the Epping article. But when I look at ], I see "Greater Western Sydney (GWS) is the region of the metropolitan area of Sydney, New South Wales, Australia '''that is generally accepted to''' ..." and I feel a little worried at the ] and the the citation is from University of Western Sydney. Now I am full of respect for universities but they don't determine geographic regions (that the NSW Govt's job).

:What exactly are these "regions"? They don't appear to be mentioned on the NSW Geographic Place Names Board website. The article ] makes clear that the situation in NSW is the same as we have in Qld, different government departments dividing up NSW into smaller chunks based on criteria that make sense to them. The only mention of Greater Western Sydney there relates to it being one of the regions used by the Department of State and Regional Development (which no longer exists but appears, as far as I can tell to have become the NSW Department of Industry) but having searched the Department of Industry website, I came up empty-handed on finding a map of the regions in general or a map of Greater Western Sydney in particular. Nor does the ABS recognise Greater Western Sydney for census purposes. Is there any reliable source on the regions and their boundaries, because I'm not finding one? ] (]) 23:45, 7 February 2018 (UTC)

::Thanks for looking into that, {{u|Kerry Raymond}}. I hate it when government departments change - it makes it so hard to keep things up to date. On my PC I have a copy of a document called "A PLAN FOR GROWING SYDNEY" from the NSW Department of Planning dated December 2014. I must have taken a copy at some earlier stage of the development of this topic. It uses slightly different terminology, calling that area (including Parramatta LGA) the "West Central Subregion". However, that's all pretty moot now since they seem to have rearranged departments so I will need to do some more research to find where the equivalent is now... please bear with me. --] (]) 03:23, 8 February 2018 (UTC)

:::{{ping|Kerry Raymond}} I have added a couple of references, but they are not great (yet). There is the archived Metropolitan Plan from the old NSW Department of Planning (before reorganization) and the Western Sydney Regional Organization of Councils. I will keep looking, but I had to spend today in hospital due to a family emergency, and that will continue, so I won't be able to watch this much for a while... --] (]) 14:28, 8 February 2018 (UTC)

== Wikimedia Australia Community Conference, Sydney, 15 June 2019 ==

For more information, please see ] via ] (]) 10:18, 15 May 2019 (UTC)

== Request for information on WP1.0 web tool ==

Hello and greetings from the maintainers of the ]! As you may or may not know, we are currently involved in an overhaul of the bot, in order to make it more modern and maintainable. As part of this process, we will be rewriting the ] that is part of the project. You might have noticed this tool if you click through the links on the project assessment summary tables.

We'd like to collect information on how the current tool is used by....you! How do you yourself and the other maintainers of your project use the web tool? Which of its features do you need? How frequently do you use these features? And what features is the tool missing that would be useful to you? We have collected all of these questions at where you can leave your response. ] (]) 04:24, 27 October 2019 (UTC)
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== Category:South Australia articles missing geocoordinate data ==

Hi everyone,

I just discovered that ] has been deleted. It was deleted because it was an . It now contains two pages. Should this type of category be protected against deletion?

Regards ] (]) 23:43, 7 November 2020 (UTC)
:I think so. ] (]) 13:07, 27 November 2020 (UTC)

== Request for input: Region(s) of Sydney for Epping ==

I have kicked off a discussion of which region(s) apply for the suburb of Epping at ], because there have been a lot of back-and-forth changes about whether it should be described as being in Western Sydney. For transparency, I am proposing that it is categorized as being in both the Western and the Northern suburbs (some sources say one, some say the other).
But it is just a two-party debate, which is getting nowhere, and some more contributions would be very helpful.
Please contribute if you have an opinion, or better still, relevant sources.--] (]) 23:40, 27 May 2021 (UTC)
:I just noticed that this topic was raised here several years ago at ]. That conversation died for wont of sources. If you check the current Talk page though, I have put together a collection of sources that should help.--] (]) 23:48, 27 May 2021 (UTC)
::It seems ] is almost entirely uncited, probably because as it says in the lede that these regions are mostly unofficial. I have a similar problem with ] which is based on the view of one Qld you Govt Dept at one point in time despite the fact that other Qld Govt Dept's also divide the state into a various other sets of regions. The problem is that some region names have long-standing *usage* (e.g. Northern Beaches, the subject of previous arguments here in Misplaced Pages) but have no precise definitions. This then leads people to think everywhere must be in some kind of region and that there is some precise test to identify the region. Personally I think we would be better to back away from using regions for categories or in definitions in the lede para. I believe we should use LGAs for such purposes as these do have precise boundaries. I think with these ill-defined regions, we should follow the guidance of ] and say (not in the lede para, but the geography section) something like "Smallville is sometimes described as being in the Nasty Region and sometimes in the Nice Region ." In my experience these disputes tend to follow the pattern of places in Nasty Region being redefined as being in the Nice Region rather than vice versa, which I presume is because it suits the real estate agents and residents to affiliate the suburb with the nicer region. ] (]) 03:51, 28 May 2021 (UTC)

== Regions, Sub-regions, & Districts of Victoria ==

I have updated the list of regions and sub-regions on ] to reflect those listed on the Victorian Government sites. See discussion ]. -- <b><span style="font-family: Kristen ITC; color: rgb(0, 35, 102); text-align: center; text-decoration: underline #FFD700;">]</span></b> (]) 04:10, 19 November 2021 (UTC)

== Peer review ==

] is at peer review as a potential ]. Any and all comments would be welcome. ] (]) 06:14, 8 March 2022 (UTC)

== "Nearest neighbours" or "suburbs around" in Infobox ==

Opinions are sought at ] as to how to handle boundary cases - eg what is displayed for "suburbs around ..." when the suburb is on the coast and there isn't another suburb on one side of the suburb. ] (]) 05:31, 19 March 2022 (UTC)

== User script to detect unreliable sources ==

{{Main|User:Headbomb/unreliable}}
I have (with the help of others) made a small user script to detect and highlight various links to ] and ]s. Some of you may already be familiar with it, given it is currently the ]. The idea is that it takes something like
*John Smith "" ''Deprecated.com''. Accessed 2020-02-14. (<code><nowiki>John Smith "" ''Deprecated.com''. Accessed 2020-02-14.</nowiki></code>)
and turns it into something like
* John Smith "{{highlight||pink}}" ''Deprecated.com''. Accessed 2020-02-14.

It will work on a variety of links, including those from {{tl|cite web}}, {{tl|cite journal}} and {{tl|doi}}.

The script is mostly based on ], ] and ] and a good dose of common sense. I'm always expanding coverage and tweaking the script's logic, so general feedback and suggestions to expand coverage to other unreliable sources are always welcomed.

Do note that this is '''not a script to be mindlessly used''', and several caveats apply. Details and instructions are available at ]. Questions, comments and requests can be made at ].

- &#32;<span style="font-variant:small-caps; whitespace:nowrap;">] {] · ] · ] · ]}</span>

<span style="font-size:90%">This is a one time notice and can't be unsubscribed from.</span> Delivered by: ] (]) 16:00, 29 April 2022 (UTC)
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==Williamsdale Wikidata links==
Williamsdale Wikidata links should link to ], not ]. Willimsdale was split in 1913 and now Williamsdale, NSW has some population as a rural commuter area while Williamsdale, ACT is effectively greenbelt. The ABS links in particular are a concern with the automatic linking of population figures, but others such as Allhomes, GeoNames and theOpenStreetMap also link to the wrong Willimsdale. Could somebody who knows how to chnage these links please fix this.--] (]) 02:28, 4 September 2022 (UTC)

==GAR Notice==
] has been nominated for a community good article reassessment. If you are interested in the discussion, please participate by adding your comments to the ]. If concerns are not addressed during the review period, the good article status may be removed from the article. ] (]) 01:38, 21 January 2023 (UTC)


== Second oldest city? == == Victorian Localities & Suburbs ==


This is in relation to the undoing of recent updates to locations listed on templates in ]...<br>
Is ] the second oldest city in Australia as claimed in the article? Or is it ] as also comes up in a Google search? Is ] the third oldest as claimed in the article? I can't find any references.. Should we abandon these claims? ] (]) 11:40, 14 December 2007 (UTC)
After updating locations in Victorian Local Government Areas (LGA's), a question has been asked of me as to what is defined as "Town", "Locality", "City", "Suburb", etc.? I haven't been able to find a proper definition for "Town", "Locality", "City", "Suburb". <br>
:Hi Barry. You might get a better response at ] where more than a few editors have an interest in Australian history. I think the claims are certainly verifiable and the crew at AWNB should be able to point you in the right direction. Cheers, ]\<sup>]</sup> 11:50, 14 December 2007 (UTC)
Technically according to accessed via , all 4 of these are listed as "Localities". <br>
For some places, calling it a "Town" sounded a lot better than calling it a "Locality". What makes a "City" different from a "Town"? possibly it's size? And as for "Suburbs", they are a bit confusing as whether it is a "Suburb" or "Town" (While metro areas are suburbs yet in regional Vic they are towns, unless they are part of a bigger city area like Bendigo where they are suburbs, and when the population is under 10 they are a locality).<br>
I would like to get some clarification on this as I have spent around 2 weeks going through and checking all 2,978 localities that belong in the 79 LGA's in Victoria only to have those in the metropolitan area reverted to their old lists. -- <b><span style="font-family: Kristen ITC; color: rgb(0, 35, 102); text-align: center; text-decoration: underline #FFD700;">]</span></b> (]) 10:56, 10 February 2023 (UTC)


:I defined them as:
== Naming convention (places) - renewed discussion - towards a single convention ==
:* City - population over 10000
I am pasting the following discussion pertinent to this heading as copied from my talk page. The conversation follows some action undertaken by me in relation to articles in Tasmania and the subsequent interest shown by other editors with regards ''a revisit of the current ] and reconsideration to the development of a single convention.''
:* Town - population between 10000 & 200
:* Locality - population under 200 (there are a few "ghost towns" with little or no population)
:* Suburb - ignored as it wasn't clearly defined
:I'm happy to redefine the population values if needed. As I did this using an excel table with formulas, I will easily be able to recreate all relevant page. If on the other hand it is decided to define them not using population values, this will be a lot harder to update.<br>
:Also, not sure if others are aware of this useful template, ]. -- <b><span style="font-family: Kristen ITC; color: rgb(0, 35, 102); text-align: center; text-decoration: underline #FFD700;">]</span></b> (]) 10:59, 10 February 2023 (UTC)
:::There is a little problem with your definition of a city with the ]. With a population of 75,000, it definitely fits, but within it are the "towns" of ], ] and ], each of which has more than 10,000 people. They were once, in fact, all officially individual cities, but the Kennett municipal mergers of the 1990s removed that status. In the same region too is ], with a population of 15,000, again, once a city, but now part of the ]. It's hard to create rigid rules on these matters. ] (]) 00:12, 11 February 2023 (UTC)


::You are more or less talking to yourself here...
'''I invite editors to consider this issue and put their views towards the development of a such a single convention....'''--] <sup>]</sup> 10:37, 3 January 2008 (UTC)
::https://pageviews.wmcloud.org/?project=en.wikipedia.org&platform=all-access&agent=user&redirects=0&range=latest-90&pages=Wikipedia_talk:WikiProject_Australian_places
::it might help to go to the oz noticeboard - but the people who were involved
::in nutting it all out probably over 10 years ago... and probably not still around...
] 11:13, 10 February 2023 (UTC)
:::I had commented on the user talk pages with a link to this topic for those involved with reverting recent updates involving this issue, I have also added a link to both the ] and ] talk pages. -- <b><span style="font-family: Kristen ITC; color: rgb(0, 35, 102); text-align: center; text-decoration: underline #FFD700;">]</span></b> (]) 11:19, 10 February 2023 (UTC)
:I think that defining places based solely on their population can be problematic. In the past what I've done to determine the difference between a town and a locality is to drop myself into the place on google maps. If there's a township there, it's probably a town, if its just a few farmhouses and fields then a locality. I live in a locality myself, it has a population of 600 but the closest thing we have to a "township" is a single hall and a tennis court. Obviously it takes much longer to research but it's more accurate.


As for what constitutes a suburb, ] is what I've been going by. But I would agree that a suburb is a type of a locality that is an extension of a city.
=== Copied from ] ===
Gudday mate,
:''moved Bruny Island to Bruny Island, Tasmania: All Australian town/city/suburb/place articles should be at Place, State no matter what their status of ambiguity is.''
You should read the naming conventions again: ]. You'll find that Australian cities, towns and suburbs are always at Place, State no matter what their status of ambiguity, but geographic features are only disambiguated when necessary, and then with the parentheses convention. ] 11:22, 2 January 2008 (UTC)


], its useful but very prone to creating redlinks in my experience.
*Yes thanks Hesperian - I have noted my error on Bruny Island. Cheers. --] <sup>]</sup> 11:27, 2 January 2008 (UTC)
] (]) 11:52, 10 February 2023 (UTC)
:All of habitable Australia is divided into localities. These are officially bounded areas. The term "suburb" is often used when a locality is part of an urban area. Towns and cities are normally defined as centrepoints of urban areas (they are not bounded as the extent of them varies over time) and there are no particular population thresholds involved. Local government areas are defined with boundaries and represent a different overlay to localities (indeed, local government boundaries sometimes split a locality -- this occurs more in rural areas than in urban areas); sometimes local government area names use terms like "town" or "city" but their use is generally historic. Historically, there were distinctions between towns and cities based on things like "has a cathedral" (I think that was a UK definition that we inherited) or based on a population theshold (which each state determined and which changed over time as the population grew). Because our urban populations are growing so much in Australia, in most states we have seen the major capital cities grow to encompass what were once independent towns or cities into vast urban areas, making it difficult to ambiguously identify individual cities or towns any more. This is why we have stopped using towns and cities for addressing in favour of localities/suburbs and why towns and cities are now just points on the map to denote the centre points of those places. Because being a city rather than a town was once a source of great local pride, people are still obsessed with calling a place a city if they can. The term that now seems to be preferred is "population centre", but it's not a term that necessarily resonates with the Misplaced Pages readers I suspect. When I write about Queensland (where we have "population centres" and no cities/towns in the official place names database), I tend to use the term "city" (as in "The city was founded in 1845 ...") where the place was historically a city but use "town" otherwise. We are not here to do ]. So I think if an argument breaks out over whether something is a "city" or not, then the person making that claim it's a city needs to present a reliable citation that it was at some time officially a city. ] (]) 21:38, 10 February 2023 (UTC)
::Because I have similar issues with Qld geography, I have an ongoing correspondence with the QLD Place Names Database team about some of these things. They have been very helpful. So you might find it helpful to talk to the equivalent VIC Govt people to get their understanding of the situation. ] (]) 22:01, 10 February 2023 (UTC)
::: (which is referenced from the Gazetteer of Australia) contains the comprehensive list of geographical feature types. In terms of this discussion, the ones worth noting are below (direct quotes):
:::* LOCALITY: An administrative bounded area distinguished for its community and/or landscape characteristics: in metropolitan areas it is commonly referred to as a ‘suburb’; it provides an official reference point for addressing purposes (page 41)
:::* TOWN SITE: An original crown subdivision of land within a PARISH or HUNDRED which has officially recognised and gazetted boundaries. (page 39)
:::* POPULATED PLACE (pages 41-42)
:::** NEIGHBOURHOOD: Does not have officially recognised and registered boundaries hence an unbounded locality: for this reason a neighbourhood name cannot be used for addressing purposes (GNR)
:::** OUTCAMP: Small Aboriginal community outside of the main community
:::** POPULATION CENTRE: A significant place where there is permanent human habitation, infrastructure and services.
:::** SETTLEMENT: A small rural community, typically outside a larger urban area.
:::But it is important to note what is not mentioned at all is a definition for TOWN or CITY (TOWN SITE being a historical term) to support my claim that these are no longer officially-used terminology. Nor does this document define URBAN AREA even though they use it in their own definitions; I guess our intuitive understanding of that term applies. ] (]) 22:32, 10 February 2023 (UTC)


:: Thanks to kerry and hilo for their views on the issue. Very careful examination of archives in a this project and some select Australian talk page archives will show the issue has been bashed around for some considerable time by now, but in most cases most of the participants in the earlier conversations have moved on in one way or other.
**No worries. It's a stupid convention. Why we have two clashing conventions is beyond me. But it's all that stands between us and total anarchy ;-) ] 11:37, 2 January 2008 (UTC)
:::What you just wrote couldn't be better stated - but I didn't want to say words to same effect first in case anyone thought I was being uppity! Cheers again. --] <sup>]</sup> 11:41, 2 January 2008 (UTC)
::::It's too late for me; everyone knows by now I am prone to get bees in my bonnet over such issues. I was heavily involved in framing that convention, and if I recall correctly I was the long voice amongst many calling for a single convention. The fact that we could potentially have a town article at "Margaret River, Western Australia" and a river article at "Margaret River (Western Australia)" was of no concern to anyone but me. I am glad to have an ally after all this time, even if it is too late to change, which it isn't, but I suspect most people would think it is. ] 00:42, 3 January 2008 (UTC)
:::::Pardon me for butting in but if you are saying what I think you are saying (i.e. All disambiguation for Australian places should be done with parentheses) then I am all in favour of this as well. If you are saying that towns like ] for example should not be disambiguated then I am not so sure. I am prepared to raise option 1 again if there is any interest and if someone can tell me where. <small>—Preceding ] comment added by ] (] • ]) 00:53, 3 January 2008 (UTC)</small><!-- Template:Unsigned --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->
::::::My priority would be a single convention for all places. Any single convention is bettern than multiple clashing conventions. My personal preferences are (i) to disambiguate only when necessary, and (ii) to disambiguate with parentheses. However I would happily concede both points if we could attain a single convention. ] 01:05, 3 January 2008 (UTC)
*Never any need for you to apologise for coming to this page Matt. And, well because this is my talk page and I am happy to maintain the thread of the conversation here (until we decide a more suitable location and copy paste) I would add that my preference is also to have a single Australian convention. Personally I prefer the following for all (other than capital cities and obvious impossible places like Murray River) >>> '''Place, State''' i.e. Orroroo, South Australia or Mt Buffalo, Victoria but for the sake of a single convention I would also concede to another convention of similar common sense. --] <sup>]</sup> 02:01, 3 January 2008 (UTC)
::I'm not entirely in agreement - I think the need for separation between geographic features, regions and informal locations on one hand, and gazetted suburbs and localities on the other does need to be made, although there may be a better way to make this distinction. I use AWB a fair bit to make mass changes and it's handy to be able to search on one string and know I'll pull in only one type of article. ] 02:12, 3 January 2008 (UTC)
:::Is categorisation a way of allowing for this to occur?--] <sup>]</sup> 02:18, 3 January 2008 (UTC)
::::They're already categorised, but that doesn't work as well as it could when you've already isolated a list and can simply use the filter option to get what you want. I did this the other day with links to the major political parties. ] 06:54, 3 January 2008 (UTC)


:: Usage and discussion about 'city' and 'suburb' and 'town' have wasted vast amounts of time in this project and other talk pages, and locality is preferred in many state projects. Determining anything by 'size' of population has the wrong leg being tackled, it is always a variable, as opposed to a name which is a constant.
:Personally, I'm also opposed to mandating a "State" disambiguator. Admittedly the state is the best disambiguator 90% of the time, but that still leaves ten percent where there are better disambiguators: islands in an island group e.g. ]; islands in a river or lake e.g. ]; tributaries, sometimes; arguably suburbs in a city. ] 03:42, 3 January 2008 (UTC)
::Yep that's a good point - and shows me I wasn't putting my thoughts down as clearly as I could have. I guess that means that the point of this discussion revolves more around whether we use a comma ''' "," ''', '''''or''''' parentheses ()in the case of any disambiguation? So the next thing might be to re-open the discourse (with a cut and paste of this conversation) in a central location. Any ideas?--] <sup>]</sup> 05:46, 3 January 2008 (UTC)
:::The current convention was hammered out at ]. But that page was more active then than it is now, so if you move this discussion there, consider advertising the discussion at ]. ] 07:06, 3 January 2008 (UTC)


:: Exceptionalism - where the terminology or usage in a state is isolated and separated from other parts of Australia, is something that should be discouraged, consistency and uniformity I would hope is a more positive affirmation for the larger project. ] 01:33, 11 February 2023 (UTC)
=== Please add further discussion below this sub-heading ===
:::I like the discussion this has produced. I'm happy to go with what is defined under LOCALITY above, and using just one undivided list in the navbox and changing the navbox titles to "Localities and suburbs in ..." or "Suburbs and localities in ..." for each of the LGA's. -- <b><span style="font-family: Kristen ITC; color: rgb(0, 35, 102); text-align: center; text-decoration: underline #FFD700;">]</span></b> (]) 05:40, 11 February 2023 (UTC)
I'd like to lend my support for a better convention because I've found it quite confusing at times but I think part of the process should be working out what we are actually naming. One example that is close, both figuratively and literally, is Newcastle which has several identities commonly referred to as "Newcastle":
* Seventh largest city in Australia - Actually not Newcastle per se. Actually "Greater Newcastle" or the "Newcastle Statistical District" or more commonly "The Lower Hunter Region" which covers several LGAs including Newcastle.
*The LGA - Should be simple but isn't. In NSW the city called Newcastle is officially the LGA called Newcastle but I've had "heated discussions" with other editors about what the city of Newcastle actually is. One editor argues that the Newcastle UCL is the city while another argued that Greater Newcastle is the city. The fact that such arguments occur demonstrate why a better convention is needed. That said, we did eventually agree, although one editor isn't really happy about it, that the UCL is the city.
*The city - As agreed this is the UCL although officially it's the same as the LGA.
*The suburb - Yes, there is a suburb called Newcastle.
::<small>The suburb based on what's been done elsewhere should be ] or ]. Care would need to be taken to avoid a clash with the Newcastle in England, but I'm just highlighting that city centres have their own issues with naming due to the inevitable clash with the city they form the centre of. ] 20:48, 3 January 2008 (UTC)</small>
:::<small>Unfortunately, Newcastle CBD isn't limited to just the suburb called Newcastle. It includes, according to Newcastle City Council, ] and ] as well (but it doesn't include every part of those suburbs!) so it would be quite reasonable for anyone editing the Newcastle city centre/CBD article to include information that isn't related to the suburb called Newcastle and it's really easy to write a huge article on just the suburb. Individual suburb articles get their own articles like "]", "]" and "]" so, following convention, "]" should be about the suburb and not the city. The article about the city of Newcastle should probably be ], which is currently about the LGA, which is actually and officially (I just got off the phone with the Department of Local Government) called Newcastle City Council although, as I've already pointed out, Newcastle City Council and The City of Newcastle are actually the same thing. --] (]) 04:39, 4 January 2008 (UTC)</small>


== Stony Head, 41°00'00.0"S, 147°00'00.0"E ==
Under the current naming convention the suburb's article should probably be at ] but that article, which we had agreed should be the UCL which includes part of the ] and one suburb from ], is primarily (~98%) about the ]. The Newcastle LGA has it's own article which seems to be named in accordance with the naming convention but I don't see how Greater Newcastle or the UCL, which are both essentially just statistical regions, fit into the convention. --] (]) 15:42, 3 January 2008 (UTC)


Editors are asked to contribute to a discussion at {{section link|Talk:Stony Head, Tasmania|41°00'00.0"S, 147°00'00.0"E}}, as to whether:
:People are getting way confused about the extent of the guideline. The state disambiguating naming convention only applies to localities. It was never meant to apply to local government areas, which are and have always been referred to by their actual names. It's not exactly relevant, but the Newcastle article you refer to does exactly what it's supposed to do - cover the content about the city. Very little if any actually pertains to the actual entity the ].
* It's worth mentioning that an arbitrary non-notable geographic point is within Stony Head
::<small>I don't have a problem with the LGA naming convention. That seems fairly clear. It's only what people choose as the "official" name that I have issue with. Regarding the Newcastle article, as I've said in response to Orderinchaos, the ] article should really be about the suburb as this follows convention. Also as I pointed out, the entity the ] and the city of Newcastle are the same animal. --] (]) 04:39, 4 January 2008 (UTC)</small>
* If it is worth mentioning, whether a citation is required to verify that fact
] (]) 11:45, 27 February 2023 (UTC)


== Infobox montage -- new design ==
:Equally, Hesperian's example above about the Houtman Abrolhos suggests that others are overdoing the guideline as well. His example of ] is a perfectly sensible means of disambiguation in the circumstances, and there's no real need to get stressed out about trying to fit conventions to it.


I have noticed that cities such as ], ], ], ] and ] are utilising a new style for their infobox montages. Instead of having the caption below the montage, the captions are underneath each individual image making it easier for the reader. Would this be acceptable for our cities' infobox montages? ] (]) 02:18, 21 March 2023 (UTC)
:I'm not really fussed about what happens with the geographic features guideline, but please don't try and get rid of the locality one. We instituted it in the first place because disambiguation was an absolute bloody nightmare - if you wanted to know where an article on a town might be, you had to (and I'm not exaggerating) at times check about six different potential article names. It's a pretty minor inconvenience, but it's meant that for the last couple of years we've been able to ensure that every link to a town or suburb actually points where it's supposed to, whether the article exists or not, which we certainly couldn't before. ] (]) 16:01, 3 January 2008 (UTC)


== Project-independent quality assessments ==
::Rebecca's pretty much summed up my point of view on this. ] 20:48, 3 January 2008 (UTC)


Quality assessments are used by Misplaced Pages editors to rate the quality of articles in terms of completeness, organization, prose quality, sourcing, etc. Most wikiprojects follow the general guidelines at ], but some have specialized assessment guidelines. A recent ] was approved and has been implemented to add a {{para|class}} parameter to {{tl|WikiProject banner shell}}, which can display a general quality assessment for an article, and to let project banner templates "inherit" this assessment.
:::The conversation so far still leaves the question whether the same disambiguator, for example a ''comma'' or ''paretheses'' could be used for all disambiguations? In other words rather than parentheses in the case of ] could it have been disambiguated as North Island, Houtman Abrolhos? Orderinchaos' point therefore about searching would need to be further considered which he puts above and then notes: <i>I think the need for separation between geographic features, regions and informal locations on one hand, and gazetted suburbs and localities on the other does need to be made, although there may be a better way to make this distinction.</i> Maybe there is no easy solution but still - '''Is there a better way to make this distinction whilst using the same style of disambiguation for all articles?'''--] <sup>]</sup> 21:22, 3 January 2008 (UTC)
::::I think the Houtman Abrolhos case shouldn't even fall under our geography guideline so it's up to editors on that set of articles to determine the best standards for subsets of subsets. As long as it's internally consistent I see few problems. ] 23:57, 4 January 2008 (UTC)


No action is required if your wikiproject follows the standard assessment approach. Over time, quality assessments will be migrated up to {{tl|WikiProject banner shell}}, and your project banner will automatically "inherit" any changes to the general assessments for the purpose of assigning categories.
Can I throw in two cents worth of support for:
* commas for localities (]);
* parentheses for geographic features (]); and
* no appendage for LGA's (])


However, if your project decides to "opt out" and follow a non-standard quality assessment approach, all you have to do is modify your wikiproject banner template to pass {{tl|WPBannerMeta}} a new {{para|QUALITY_CRITERIA|custom}} parameter. If this is done, changes to the general quality assessment will be ignored, and your project-level assessment will be displayed and used to create categories, as at present. ] (]) 14:32, 9 April 2023 (UTC)
Localities should always be associated with a State/Territory name. Geographic features might be associated with a State/Territory name, or might be better described by reference to another geographic feature (per the North Island example above). LGA's will have various names (City of .., Shire of....., xx Council and so on) depending on circumstance)


== Official renaming of Fraser Island to K'gari ==
Where there is overlap this could potentially give us ], ] and the ]. The small number of anomalies could be addressed in whatever manner seemed best, in the comfortable knowledge that the vast bulk of articles were easily locatable and that disambiguations were uniformly handled.


As of 7 June 2023, both the geographical feature and locality Fraser Island are officially renamed K'gari.. Comments sought on:
So - this is essentially a comment in support of the status quo. Combining the convention for localities with the convention for geographic feaures would be more confusing for readers than having two simple systems (the commas and parentheses). ] (]) 00:29, 4 January 2008 (UTC)
* ] (geographical feature)
* ] (locality)
* ] (category)
] (]) 05:52, 7 June 2023 (UTC)


== Australian Statistical Geography Standard - draft page ==
:I think Euryalus is spot on. ] (]) 01:05, 4 January 2008 (UTC)


I'm working on a draft of a page (]) about the standard, as with the arrival of ] I thought an introduction to its data source structure would be useful. However I don't want to go too far until others agree it's worth it. Please let me know on the talk page for it. ] (]) 07:26, 10 September 2023 (UTC)
:I think Euryalus is close but I believe expansion is needed to avoid ambiguity in the situation where there are two or more things with the same name. For example, where a city and suburb have the same name, "name, state" should refer to the suburb while "City of name" (or something else that can be agreed upon) should refer to the city. For an explanation of my reasoning please refer to my edits above. --] (]) 04:39, 4 January 2008 (UTC)


== Towns and related Localities ==
::I agree there is a problem in the case where there is a suburb name that matches the town name. Both are localities, so both in theory deserve the "name, state" nomenclature. Thankfully these circumstances are pretty rare.


] has over the past few days started making a considerable number of edits to the infoboxes of articles on (particularly Victorian) places. A look at at least some of these edits - adding areas, adding lists of adjacent localities, adding local_map=yes - seems to be equating 'towns' (for want of a potentially less divisive term - this is not the place for that discussion!) to SALs with the same name. Especially in rural areas, I'm not convinced this equivalance is valid. The articles are generally about the towns, not the SALs which can have much larger geographic areas. The added areas, local maps and lists of adjacent localities are for the SALs.
::I don't think the town article should be renamed "City of xx" because that would clash with standard naming of LGA's. Using "newcastle CBD" doesn't always work either,a s the CBD is bigger than the suburb. Could I suggest as a one-off alternative to address these rare occasions that we use "Newcastle (suburb), New South Wales" for the suburb, then keep "Newcastle, New South Wales" for the town and "City of Newcastle" for the LGA? ] (]) 05:23, 4 January 2008 (UTC)


This process may appear valid when the population figures (especially those shown due to ]) are for the SALs, but when the UCL population figures are eventually loaded into Wikidata they will not be for the area in the infobox or the area shown on the local map, and any calculation of population density will also become innacurate.
:::We have the problem anywhere there is a major town or city which also has suburbs, and there's a need to write about the central suburb. This applies to every Australian capital city and many regional cities. I agree that "CBD" or "city centre" are incorrect in factual terms - the Perth CBD would also include any part of West Perth or East Perth south of the Fremantle/Midland railway, which would exclude a fair proportion of Perth the suburb, while Melbourne's would exclude any part of Melbourne the suburb south of the Yarra. My personal solution would be eg Perth, Western Australia (suburb) - we have that for Melton which is a rather strange case of its own. ] 23:57, 4 January 2008 (UTC)


I have left a message on ]'s ] asking them to pause their editing process and join the discussion here. ] (]) 11:30, 19 September 2023 (UTC)
::::This "City of ..." issue is a red herring. If you check the ], you'll find that every state gazettes its local government areas with names of the form "City/Town/Shire of ...", except for South Australia, which doesn't gazette its local government areas at all. "City of Newcastle" is therefore the formally gazetted name of a local government area. The name is ''not'' the outcome of our internal naming conventions. It is neither disambiguated nor in need of disambiguation. Confusing it may be to some, but it is completely outside the scope of this discussion. ] 05:40, 4 January 2008 (UTC)


:Hi @], I had a look over the last few to figure out if there was a miss-match. Correct me if I'm wrong but you're saying the Misplaced Pages page for the town should only represent the town centre and not the locality but has the locality population listed as the population?
Still it bothers me that the conventions clash wherever a locality is named after a nearby geographic feature. People seem unconcerned by this, and understandably so because these are still fairly rare ]s. Yet the fact remains that if I want to create separate articles for Margaret River the river and Margaret River the town, I would be expected to create them at ] and ] respectively. To the passing casual reader, this looks utterly ridiculous, and any attempt to explain it away by recourse to our naming conventions would sound like a load of navel-gazing nonsense. ] 05:40, 4 January 2008 (UTC)
:Here's the method I used.
:I cross referenced the population from Misplaced Pages which corresponds to its underlying Wikidata item, this also matched the linked ABS stats. The ABS map boundary data also matches that of OpenStreetMap and GeoNames which corresponds to vicmap, the latter being where the area can be extracted. The linked OpenStreetMap entity in Wikidata also produces the same boundary in the tWikimedia commons infobox automatically. ] (]) 08:00, 20 September 2023 (UTC)
::I'm pretty much saying exactly that: the articles are usually about the town - the built-up area - while the census data currently in Wikidata, and the boundaries in vicmap and from there presumably into OSM and the infobox local_map maps, is about a Locality that (a) has the same name as the town, but (b) can have a much larger area and an additional (rural) population. The existing data seems to be about the Localities that are designed to cover the whole of Australia without gaps or overlaps, they are not designed to represent towns.<ref name=sal>{{cite web | url = https://www.abs.gov.au/statistics/standards/australian-statistical-geography-standard-asgs-edition-3/jul2021-jun2026/non-abs-structures/suburbs-and-localities | title = Suburbs and Localities | access-date = 2023-09-10 | publisher = Australia Bureau of Statistics}}</ref> They are referred to by the ABS as 'Suburbs and Localities' (SAL), but they are specified by the state/territory governments, not the ABS. What does better represent a 'town' is the ABS-defined 'Urban Centres and Localities' (UCL).<ref name=ucl>{{cite web | url = https://www.abs.gov.au/statistics/standards/australian-statistical-geography-standard-asgs-edition-3/jul2021-jun2026/significant-urban-areas-urban-centres-and-localities-section-state/urban-centres-and-localities | title = Urban Centres and Localities | access-date = 2023-09-10 | publisher = Australia Bureau of Statistics}}</ref> Unfortunately no census data for these has yet been imported into Wikidata.
::From what you say about the map sources, no map data for UCLs exists either (except on the ABS website). You know the map sources better than me - all I'm going on is what local_map=yes produces in the infobox.
::PS: I do wish the term 'locality' was used with only one meaning when talking geographical statistics etc., but unfortunately it has two that can be quite different, and it can make things confused. ] (]) 13:04, 20 September 2023 (UTC)
:::] I've just re-read your first reply, and my apologies - you asked if the WP articles '''should''' only be about the town, not the formal locality with its larger area. No I'm not insisting on that, but observing that articles '''usually are''' about the urban town, and therefore the stats and maps should reflect that - but often don't at the moment. Admittedly there are articles about the localities (eg:]), but particularly when the existence of the locality is the only reason for an article that is likely to stay a forever-stub, I wonder {{strike|whether}} if they really meet notability requirements. ] (]) 23:35, 20 September 2023 (UTC)


::As this conversation appears to be between two recent editors, I do hope you realise that aspects of this conversation have been gone through a few times in the last 15 years or so - the full range of the points - the problem is that most of the discussants from the past have either left wikipedia or whatever. The question is whether anyone is prepared to find the historic precedent points - where the abs 'suburb' (a perennial trap) or the town/locality problems - were established by earlier generation editors. It appears that wikipedia in general has not got a good mechanism for clarifying where and how decisions within a particular subject area can be established and left in a point where later editors do not have to re invent things... or for that matter go on goose chases where things already have been established. ] 00:48, 21 September 2023 (UTC)
=== Discussion on hybrid possibility ===
:::So it seems newish editors have little choice at the moment, if they want to find out what established good practice might be in this space, but to trawl through the talk-page archives of (a) this project and (b) perhaps ] and determine for themselves what proposed practices have been accepted. As you say, not the best way to avoid re-invention or unnecessary discussion.
:True, but there seems no alternative other than creating articles such as "Margaret River (river)" and "Margaret River (town)". This could have been done instead of the current system but would have generated its own set of edge cases. In its place I think the current system works pretty well but I won't die in a ditch if consensus changes it to something else. ] (]) 06:02, 4 January 2008 (UTC)
:::And by 'this space' I mean something fairly limited: the relationship between WP articles on Australian places and ABS / ASGS information. At the moment this is primarily about the contents of the infobox, but I could see it being wider. ] (]) 13:56, 21 September 2023 (UTC)
::::Thanks for the reply - all it needs someone generous with time to trawl through the archive to find the earlier discussions, and offer the diffs. to either clarify if whether they are still relevant (or not), in the knowledge that more recent developments might require careful re-statements. However it is very possible that abs changes over time might well establish newer standards that have altered the criterion from ten years ago or whatever. There are also now indeed correlations with wikidata (less than ten years) - that actually render parts of the infoboxes redundant, however the changes that involve wikidata and external data changes with abs or other bodies - probably need to be re-stated at some stage.
::::The great thing is to see newish editors attempting to develop a consensus on found info - maybe in the end the earlier discussions are found to be redundant! You never know... ] 14:10, 21 September 2023 (UTC)
:::::It's a project I'm going to have a go at, though it will probably take a while just to establish the process and format, let alone gather the information and get new consensus.
:::::A couple of questions:
:::::* are there any other forums (apart from the two talk archives mentioned above) I should be looking at?
:::::* I'm thinking of (a) an information-gathering (and presumably discussion) page leading to (b) an essay, with the drafts in my userspace. Is this the best way to go, or are there better places to create these things?
:::::] (]) 23:19, 21 September 2023 (UTC)


:::::: In answer to your questions, this is it. It might seem a bit like an echo chamber.
::"Margaret River (river)" and "Margaret River (town)" aren't ''exactly'' the titles I would have chosen, but I'll accept them for the sake of the argument. The reason why these are superior to "Margaret River (Western Australia)" and "Margaret River, Western Australia" is because the former are clear and obviously not arbitrary, whereas the latter are completely arbitrary and give no clue as to the subject of the article, unless you've been a Wikipedian for a year or so. To put it another way, if we're going to choose "Margaret River (Western Australia)" and "Margaret River, Western Australia" for a town and river respectively, then we might just as well number off all the "John Smith" articles as ], ], etc. This example is no less obscure and arbitrary than what we're doing here. ] 06:15, 4 January 2008 (UTC)


Well up until a day or so go this was, in a literal sense, the isolated outlier of the known universe - see https://pageviews.wmcloud.org/?project=en.wikipedia.org&platform=all-access&agent=user&redirects=0&range=latest-90&pages=Wikipedia_talk:WikiProject_Australian_places
:::And it seems would allow for superior searching techniques. What titles do you suggest Hesperian?--] <sup>]</sup> 06:29, 4 January 2008 (UTC)


Whether any of the watchers might even choose to venture to comment, then that is the old problem of lurking versus the actual silence that usually follows.
::::Since there is a Margaret River in the Northern Territory, I'd prefer ], ] and ]. But I'd have no objection to the last being just ]. I would also happily accept a hybrid convention: ], ] and ]. A pure comma convention i.e. ] doesn't do much for me, but I could tolerate it. In short, anything that disambiguates ''meaningfully'' rather than ''arbitrarily'' has my support. ] 11:02, 4 January 2008 (UTC)


There are significant carry over issues between wikidata and this set of problems. Well worth exploring whether the australian project participants inside wikidata might want to join in here as well. ] 01:06, 22 September 2023 (UTC)
:I'm new to all of this, so forgive my ignorance, but in my short time editing I have often encountered specially written 'disambiguation pages' to deal with articles that may otherwise have shared exactly the same name?


:Hmmm, we are in a bit of a backwater, aren't we (I)! Still, I'll pull together the history of the issues in a userspace page (]), to avoid clogging up the history of the backwater with lots of changes, and present a coherent result when I'm done. Hopefully we can get a wider interest after that. ] (]) 23:37, 22 September 2023 (UTC)
:By way of example, taking ]'s lead, I typed John Smith into the search bar and arrived at the following ] disambiguation page.


== WikiProject Bendigo needs you! ==
:If there is a very good and effective disambiguation page .. then that actual naming of articles that might otherwise share the same name (ie articles that do not have unique name) would seem to be largely irrelevant, as long as the given name is unique. Perhaps, instead of seeking to use names and naming conventions to 'disambiguate', effective and efficient use of disambiguation pages could be used for situations like ], which currently simply redirects to the town irrespective of any naming conventions, and irrespective of whether or not there is also a Margaret River (River) in Western Australia or a Margret River in the United States.


] is currently seeking interested editors to join the project. If interested, please add your name to the project's participants list and start editing! ] (]) 05:17, 30 January 2024 (UTC)
:With regard to 'Australian place names' and place naming.. perhaps attention could be given to a template map of Australia to be used for Australian place name disambiguations.. on which places or features sharing the same name might be numbered/located, with symbols indicating 'town', 'mountain', 'river', such that users searching the name arrive at the page and use the map to select the appropriate article.


== Invitation to participate in infobox discussion ==
:Just some thoughts from a complete novice who believes single and/or simple, wholly unique names of places should be able to be entered on their own without being encumbered with whole pile of add ons (whether in parenthisis, or comma's or what) ..Cheers ] (]) 15:16, 4 January 2008 (UTC)


Hi everyone. I invite you all to participate in the discussion on ] to come to a common interpretation about the infobox image format for the city related articles. It would be of a great help. ]] 16:52, 6 March 2024 (UTC)
::Thanks for your comment Bruceanthro. Perhaps the use of John Smith is not as useful as it appears. This discussion really only relates to the naming of Australian places. However your reference to a disambiguation page still brings up the issue of how a place (or for that matter person) is disambiguated on that page to point to the correct article. Bearing in mind then Rebecca's reminder points above on (a) retaining the current locality system, and (b) on only disambiguating places that are not localities (i.e. geographic features) where necessary, it would seem to me that Hesperian's idea of a hybrid (when disambiguation is necessary) would provide us with something that retains the current locality guideline and then with the parenthesis addition of (town) (river) (lake) etc would also add to the neatness and logicality of the system. Other thoughts? --] <sup>]</sup> 21:44, 4 January 2008 (UTC)


== Inconsistencies in Distances Given Between Locations ==
The hybrid option is growing on me. But we're begging the real issue here. In order to adopt the hybrid option to resolve conflicts, we would need agreement to adopt the comma convention for geographical features, and there appears to be no consensus for that. ] 00:08, 5 January 2008 (UTC)


I have noticed that the infoboxes for many Australian places are inconsistent in whether they measure distances between places by road or as the crow flies. For example, the pages of many smaller cities such as ] often give the distances by road whereas pages for larger cities such as ] tend to show direct distances, typically citing https://geodesyapps.ga.gov.au/distance. ] states that distances should be by road, though I am unsure how strictly the template needs to be adhered to.
*'''Agreed''' - that is I agree we need to seek a joint consensus on moving to a comma convention at the same time as gaining a consensus on using a hybrid similar to what you have first suggested. To my mind the comma is best because (a) it means no variation to current locality disambiguation; (b) therefore means no adjustment to most existing pages of this type, and (c) would allow for a relatively easy adjustment for current geographical feature disambiguations (where disambiguation is necessary). I would be very interested to hear more views on this possibility - both from editors already commenting here and from Aussie editors in general.--] <sup>]</sup> 02:01, 5 January 2008 (UTC)
*:Would moving to a comma convention for geographical features imply moving to compulsory preemptive disambiguation of geographical features? I don't think I like that idea very much. How do you like the sound of ]? Ugh.
*:To be frank, I've never understood why it is necessary or even desirable to preemptively disambiguate any articles, even those on localities. Why is it necessary to put our article on Jerramungup at ] rather than the obvious and intuitive ]? I realise I'm heavily outnumbered on that point, but I simply can't see any merit in the arguments for doing so.
*:By the way, there is a locality gazetted by New South Wales under the name ]. Would anyone care to put a ", New South Wales" after that?
*:] 03:38, 5 January 2008 (UTC)
*I don't want us to get too far off track on this issue so I would respond by saying I understand your view on locality disambiguation - however the issue with localities is far more likely to result in more than one - for example ] and thus automatic disambiguation seems a good idea. However in terms of geographical features Rebecca makes the point (as agreed by most it seems) that they need only be disambiguated if necessary. That is why I have written ''(where disambiguation is necessary)'' above. I assume (hopefully correctly) that there is only one ] and thus no need for disambiguation (comma or parenthesis). Similarly the one off border crossing you refer to is by definition one off and no need for further disambiguation. If this is agreed then the comma/hybrid possibility (including the overall convention that disambiguation only occurs for Geo Features where necessary) still appears to be a valid solution.--] <sup>]</sup> 04:15, 5 January 2008 (UTC)
::Re localities - it ensures consistent formatting, which is useful for localities due to their very similar nature to each other, but not useful for geographic regions, features etc as the location is only meant to be a disambiguator or somehow helpful. ] 03:34, 6 January 2008 (UTC)


I have even noticed such an inconsistency within a single article: The page for ] gave the distance from Canberra as 659 km (the distance by road), while giving the direct distances to other cities - erroneously implying that Melbourne is closer to Adelaide than it is to Canberra. For now I have changed the distance to be the direct figure of 466 km to match the other distances in the article, but I am wondering if going forward my future edits should adhere strictly to the infobox template and always give the distance by road. ] (]) 08:42, 19 May 2024 (UTC)
*'''Support Euralyus' proposal above''' - it's good. ] (]) 12:44, 5 January 2008 (UTC)
:Question - Euralysus has two proposal's above - I assume you mean his modified one? --] <sup>]</sup> 21:42, 5 January 2008 (UTC)
::I'm not proposing a modified one - I support the current system. My second post above was just to say I can see some logic in the alternative as a second-best choice. ] (]) 01:02, 6 January 2008 (UTC)


:If the template says road distances, then it should be road distances, which is easy enough to do with Google Maps (or similar tool). The only real problem I find is with islands without bridges, where clearly there cannot be road distances. But, like any infobox field, if the situation is more complex than the capacity of the infobox to represent, don't put a value in the infobox but explain the more complex situation in the article body, where you are free to use any kind of distance (although I would suggest making clear whether you are using road distances or direct distances). ] (]) 22:46, 10 June 2024 (UTC)
== Railway stations ==
:I have notice this too. I have fixed this on many articles of places around Melbourne's south-east but I can not fix all of the Australian places Infoboxes. I was just wandering where I would be able to post this issue so that other people in this project could help address this issue and fix it. ] (]) 09:36, 7 July 2024 (UTC)


==Module (Lua) version of Infobox Australian place==
Can I add a comment on railway stations? I've been doing some work on these for a while and it would be nice to have a consistent style here as well. What has been done officially is to have '''"X railway station, City"''' where the station lies within the capital cities' metropolitan rail system (and they are all externally defined) and '''"X railway station, State"''' where it falls outside of that. The only exceptions are where the station name is the same as the city's name (eg. "Perth railway station, Perth" is ridiculous, so ] is fine) or the station is a major landmark (eg. "]" but there is a redirect from the consistent one as well). Can we have some agreement on this so we can have something to show others when they attempt to redirect an entire city's stations (this has happened before)? Thanks. ] (]) 12:43, 5 January 2008 (UTC)


There is now a Lua version of the whole of ], open for testing. The Module (lua) code is at ], the template to call to test the module is {{tl|Sandbox/Innesw/Infobox Australian place}}. There is a ], based on the ]. Please put comments and (especially negative) test results either here or on the ]. ] (]) 06:38, 29 May 2024 (UTC)
:I think it's just been adopted as an unofficial convention in the past, because there's enough coinciding names between cities that it'd be a pain to have to keep checking when one adds links. As such, I think we may as well just codify the norm. (And in the event that someone tries to redirect an entire city's stations, I think the only proper course of action is to tell them to get stuffed.) ] (]) 13:07, 5 January 2008 (UTC)


:What is it supposed to be doing that's new, different, better? ] (]) 02:31, 1 June 2024 (UTC)
::I am pretty much with Rebecca on this. (An interesting exception applies to stations on the new Mandurah line, and I don't doubt it exists elsewhere too, where Mandurah which is beyond the Perth metropolitan boundaries has a Perth station and a Perth line). ] 03:31, 6 January 2008 (UTC)
::Nothing much - yet. It's the first stage in a two stage process. I do have a number of ideas for changes to the template, but changes will be much easier to implement in a module rather than in template code.
::If people are happy with the module version, ie: that it ''doesn't'' produce output importantly different from the original, I'll start putting up proposals for changes. Some of these will be pretty minor, others will likely need more lengthy discussion. ] (]) 00:00, 9 June 2024 (UTC)
:::Yes, but why did you make the change? What is the benefit? If it is part of a larger plan, please disclose it. This is an infobox used in many articles. ] (]) 22:52, 10 June 2024 (UTC)

Latest revision as of 17:27, 9 December 2024

This is the talk page for discussing WikiProject Australian places and anything related to its purposes and tasks.
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Cadastral divisions

I just noticed someone has added information and a few articles about the cadastral (property/allotment) divisions in Australia. See Cadastral divisions of Australia. I think this falls under the scope of this project and probably should be mentioned here. Also, it would be nice to see project members have a look at these articles in an effort to standardise them and make them more accessible/useful (I never knew they existed).

This came about because a guy in the army was shot in the head last night in a training exercise at a place called Cultana and I couldn't find it on Misplaced Pages. Finally I found it is the name of a hundred (parish) in South Australia. There is an airstrip and army base of some sort there apparently. Consequently I created Cultana,_South_Australia] (which, on reflection, is probably misnamed but that was what the link from Cadastral divisions of South Australia prescribed to turn the red link blue). Feel free to edit/move/merge to other.

What do you think about these hundreds. Do we need an article on each hundred/parish? Each county? Donama (talk) 05:46, 21 October 2009 (UTC)

(Centralised discussion on the same topic at WP:AWNB#Cadastral_divisions) Orderinchaos 04:56, 23 October 2009 (UTC)

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Australian places articles have been selected for the Misplaced Pages 0.8 release

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Two places with the same name in the same state

I don't understand the policy for when there's two places in the same state with the same name: what does "the same method of disambiguation that is used in that state" mean?

Concrete example. In Victoria, there's two Bellfields: Bellfield 3081 in the City of Banyule in Melbourne which is what Bellfield, Victoria currently talks about, and Bellfield 3381 split between the Northern and Southern Grampians Shires, in the state's west. Google Maps for the Grampian Bellfield and the Melburnian Bellfield; search for similar information in VicNames and Australia Post.

So what does the policy say for this? I guess the Grampian Bellfield is not notable enough to get an article—it doesn't look like there's any development there and it's surrounded by a national park. And no-one's tried writing about it yet. But perhaps having a name clash is enough to warrant discussion.

The example given, about Kingston, South Australia, seems to be completely irrelevant, because no such place exists; instead, there's Kingston SE, South Australia and Kingston-on-Murray, South Australia, and "Kingston" is just a historical/local name.

Felix the Cassowary 19:47, 8 November 2010 (UTC)

Fwiw, the ABS distinguishes "Bellfield (Grampians)" and "Bellfield (Greater Melbourne)", which seems to be consistent with what we do with rivers like Avon River (Gippsland) and Avon River (Western Victoria). Note that the ABS does not create official names; it just needs unique ones. —Felix the Cassowary 20:21, 8 November 2010 (UTC)
Yup, on the basis of Springfield, Victoria up in Mildura and Springfield, Victoria (Macedon Ranges) this is approximately the right solution. Obviously the idea of using LGAs won't work in all cases—as many localities are split—but the general idea of a mid-level disambiguator is useful. I'm going to update the article page with a practical example, instead of the current irrelevant one. —Felix the Cassowary 20:49, 8 November 2010 (UTC)

Merge to WikiProject Australia?

WikiProject Australian places is looking a bit too quiet these days. The last talk page activity was in November 2010. What's more, a lot of what should be discussed at this project is being discussed at WikiProject Australia. What do others think of a merger of some sort? ClaretAsh 23:00, 7 February 2012 (UTC)

Requested moves of 30+ Melbourne street names

Editors here may be interested in this multiple RM that I have initiated. My preamble:

These articles are all concerned with street names in Melbourne. (I would have include another 17, but the template has a limit of 30.) I do not support these moves; but I know that some very active editors do. It is time to air the matter, once and for all. Is it better to have an article on Collins Street in Melbourne called simply Collins Street, or to have it called Collins Street, Melbourne as at present? Which option serves the needs of Misplaced Pages's worldwide readership better? In almost all cases that I list there is no content in the destination article, just a redirect. And in almost all cases there is no Misplaced Pages article that very closely resembles the Melbourne-oriented one. There are, for example, no other Collins Streets with their own articles.

Your vote ("Support" or "Oppose") would be welcome, along with your reasons.

Noetica 12:35, 17 April 2012 (UTC)

Lake Tabourie or Tabourie Lake?

I have just returned from the lower Shoalhaven in NSW and noticed a lack of coverage on some of the villages down that way so I am endeavouring to add some content (starting with a few photos). The existing stub for Tabourie Lake, New South Wales seems to be incorrectly named. The Shoalhaven City Council refers to it as Tabourie Lake, but the Geographical Names Board website and ABS Statistical divisions list the current naming of the village as "Lake Tabourie". I propose the article title is changed to Lake Tabourie (there is already a redirect from here) and the redirect on Tabourie Lake, unless anybody can provide a definitive answer? I know it is a minor stub, but as someone who grew up in the area calling it Lake Tabourie, it is irritating and incorrect! Dfadden (talk) 11:22, 6 April 2013 (UTC)

The Geographical Names Board lists "Lake Tabourie" as the suburb's name on the Geographical Names Register. The ABS uses Lake Tabourie as well. "Tabourie Lake" is the name of a village in the suburb. There is also a rural place and a lagoon called Tabourie Lake. --AussieLegend () 08:19, 11 January 2014 (UTC)

Redlinked place names in Winton Branch Railway (Queensland)

I noticed that some of the station names in Winton Branch Railway (Queensland) are redlinks. Perhaps someone familiar with Queensland geography could start articles on them. I created Prubi, but it's just a stub. Eastmain (talkcontribs) 06:52, 1 October 2013 (UTC)

Perth example

Perth is no longer a disambiguation page. Also there can be ambiguity between, for instance, the name of a place and the name of a person. I suggest changing

:*Where the town/city name has or is likely to have other uses somewhere else on earth, a link from the appropriate disambiguation page should be made (eg. ] contains a link to ], and ] contains links to several Australian towns).

to

:*Where the town/city name has or is likely to have other uses, a link from the appropriate disambiguation page should be made (eg. ] contains a link to ], and ] contains links to several Australian towns).rybec 00:20, 11 January 2014 (UTC)

Sigh. No problems with your change (WP:JUSTFIXIT applies surely?) but why are participants in the US Placenames discussion all of a sudden interested in changing the Australian naming guideline - especially ones who have never shown any interest in Australian topics ever. The Australian project is not a place to fight proxy battles over US placenames. -- Mattinbgn (talk) 00:51, 11 January 2014 (UTC)
I've changed it. Cheers. —rybec 01:17, 11 January 2014 (UTC)

Comment on the WikiProject X proposal

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WikiProject X is live!

Hello everyone!

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What are the Good Articles?

Trying to improve my articles, I thought I would look at the GAs in this field. I see from this page that there are three of them. But I cannot see any way to find out what those articles are, so I can read them. At first I naively thought I could just click on the number "3" in the table and it might show me what made up that count, but no such luck. Can anybody suggest how to find these GAs? If not, are there any generally agreed guidelines, or some known good examples I can look at? --Gronk Oz (talk) 01:09, 22 January 2015 (UTC)

try Category:GA-Class Australian places articles and its subcategories. --Scott Davis 05:38, 22 January 2015 (UTC)
Muchas gracias - just what I wanted, thanks! --Gronk Oz (talk) 08:07, 22 January 2015 (UTC)

WikiConfererence Australia 2015 - Save the date 3-5 October 2015

Our first Australian conference for Wikipedians/Wikimedians will be held 3-5 October 2015. Organised by Wikimedia Australia, there will be a 2-day conference (Saturday 3 October and Sunday 4 October) with an optional 3rd day (Monday 5 October) for specialist topics (unconference discussions, training sessions, etc). The venue is the State Library of Queensland in Brisbane. So put those dates in your diary! Note: Monday is a public holiday is some states but not others. Read about it here: WikiConference Australia 2015

As part of that page, there are now sections for you to:

  • indicate your interest in possibly attending the conference (this is not a binding commitment, of course)
  • add suggestions for topics to include in the conference: what you would like to hear/discuss (again, there is no commit to you presenting/organising that topic, although it’s great if you are willing to do so), or indicate your enthusiasm for any existing topic on the list by adding a note of support underneath it

It would really help our planning if you could let us know about possible attendance and the kind of topics that would make you want to come. If you don’t want to express your views on-wiki, please email me at kerry.raymond@wikimedia.org.au or committee@wikimedia.org.au

We are hoping to have travel subsidies available to assist active Australasian Wikipedians to attend the conference, although we are not currently in a position to provide details, but be assured we are doing everything we can to make it possible for active Australian Wikipedians to come to the conference. Kerry (talk) 00:15, 20 April 2015 (UTC)

Folks, just letting you know we will not be proceeding with Wikiconference Australia 2015 originally proposed for 3-5 October 2015. Thanks to those of you who expressed your support. You are free to attend the football finals instead :-) Kerry (talk) 07:47, 3 July 2015 (UTC)

Comleroy, New South Wales

Hi! Is Comleroy, New South Wales a (notable) place? - Nabla (talk) 01:17, 28 July 2015 (UTC)

Hi, You might get more of a response at WP:AWNB - this project is dormant and used mainly for record keeping and a repository of links. A search of Geoscience Australia show "Comleroy" listed as an "unofficial" locality. I don't know the place, however. Misplaced Pages:GEOLAND may be useful. -- Mattinbgn (talk) 04:23, 28 July 2015 (UTC)

How to deal with repeated changes that contradict sources

I hope you can help me to avoid an edit war. The question concerns Epping, New South Wales, specifically which region of Sydney it is in. The sources are quite clear that Epping is in Parramatta LGA, which means it is included in Greater Western Sydney. However, Spp908 has persistently removed this from the article. On his/her User Talk page (here), I tried to explain the need for sources to support such a change. I asked him/her to take the issue to the Talk page before making a change. However, the reply consisted of personal opinions only, and the change was made again. This cycle repeated, me asking for sources and Spp908 giving only opinions and personal insults. He/she refuses to provide any sources and refuses to discuss on the Talk page. He/she is a new editor so I don't want to escalate too fast, but I don't want to compromise the article either. I am not sure what more I can do to stabilize the article - can somebody offer a suggestion? --Gronk Oz (talk) 14:53, 7 February 2018 (UTC)

@Gronk Oz: I took a look at the article and I see the edit war. But what I don't see is the citation in the article that says anything about what region it is in. I assumed that Spp908 had removed the citation but I don't see it in the last version as edited by you either. So I thought maybe the source is in Greater Western Sydney and just needs to be added into the Epping article. But when I look at Greater Western Sydney, I see "Greater Western Sydney (GWS) is the region of the metropolitan area of Sydney, New South Wales, Australia that is generally accepted to ..." and I feel a little worried at the weasel words and the the citation is from University of Western Sydney. Now I am full of respect for universities but they don't determine geographic regions (that the NSW Govt's job).
What exactly are these "regions"? They don't appear to be mentioned on the NSW Geographic Place Names Board website. The article Regions of New South Wales makes clear that the situation in NSW is the same as we have in Qld, different government departments dividing up NSW into smaller chunks based on criteria that make sense to them. The only mention of Greater Western Sydney there relates to it being one of the regions used by the Department of State and Regional Development (which no longer exists but appears, as far as I can tell to have become the NSW Department of Industry) but having searched the Department of Industry website, I came up empty-handed on finding a map of the regions in general or a map of Greater Western Sydney in particular. Nor does the ABS recognise Greater Western Sydney for census purposes. Is there any reliable source on the regions and their boundaries, because I'm not finding one? Kerry (talk) 23:45, 7 February 2018 (UTC)
Thanks for looking into that, Kerry Raymond. I hate it when government departments change - it makes it so hard to keep things up to date. On my PC I have a copy of a document called "A PLAN FOR GROWING SYDNEY" from the NSW Department of Planning dated December 2014. I must have taken a copy at some earlier stage of the development of this topic. It uses slightly different terminology, calling that area (including Parramatta LGA) the "West Central Subregion". However, that's all pretty moot now since they seem to have rearranged departments so I will need to do some more research to find where the equivalent is now... please bear with me. --Gronk Oz (talk) 03:23, 8 February 2018 (UTC)
@Kerry Raymond: I have added a couple of references, but they are not great (yet). There is the archived Metropolitan Plan from the old NSW Department of Planning (before reorganization) and the Western Sydney Regional Organization of Councils. I will keep looking, but I had to spend today in hospital due to a family emergency, and that will continue, so I won't be able to watch this much for a while... --Gronk Oz (talk) 14:28, 8 February 2018 (UTC)

Wikimedia Australia Community Conference, Sydney, 15 June 2019

For more information, please see Wikimedia Australia Community Conference, Sydney, 15 June 2019 via Kerry (talk) 10:18, 15 May 2019 (UTC)

Request for information on WP1.0 web tool

Hello and greetings from the maintainers of the WP 1.0 Bot! As you may or may not know, we are currently involved in an overhaul of the bot, in order to make it more modern and maintainable. As part of this process, we will be rewriting the web tool that is part of the project. You might have noticed this tool if you click through the links on the project assessment summary tables.

We'd like to collect information on how the current tool is used by....you! How do you yourself and the other maintainers of your project use the web tool? Which of its features do you need? How frequently do you use these features? And what features is the tool missing that would be useful to you? We have collected all of these questions at this Google form where you can leave your response. Walkerma (talk) 04:24, 27 October 2019 (UTC)

Discussion on photomontage for Sydney

Hey there! A discussion on what to illustrate, and which images to include, in a potential {{Photo montage}} for the Sydney article is currently taking place at Talk:Sydney#Selection of images for a photomontage. Feel free to join in on the discussion and share your thoughts on the matter! – PhilipTerryGraham (talk · articles · reviews) 22:30, 9 January 2020 (UTC)

Category:South Australia articles missing geocoordinate data

Hi everyone,

I just discovered that Category:South Australia articles missing geocoordinate data has been deleted. It was deleted because it was an Empty category. It now contains two pages. Should this type of category be protected against deletion?

Regards Cowdy001 (talk) 23:43, 7 November 2020 (UTC)

I think so. Kerry (talk) 13:07, 27 November 2020 (UTC)

Request for input: Region(s) of Sydney for Epping

I have kicked off a discussion of which region(s) apply for the suburb of Epping at Talk:Epping, New South Wales#Region(s) of Sydney for Epping, because there have been a lot of back-and-forth changes about whether it should be described as being in Western Sydney. For transparency, I am proposing that it is categorized as being in both the Western and the Northern suburbs (some sources say one, some say the other). But it is just a two-party debate, which is getting nowhere, and some more contributions would be very helpful. Please contribute if you have an opinion, or better still, relevant sources.--Gronk Oz (talk) 23:40, 27 May 2021 (UTC)

I just noticed that this topic was raised here several years ago at #How to deal with repeated changes that contradict sources. That conversation died for wont of sources. If you check the current Talk page though, I have put together a collection of sources that should help.--Gronk Oz (talk) 23:48, 27 May 2021 (UTC)
It seems Regions of Sydney is almost entirely uncited, probably because as it says in the lede that these regions are mostly unofficial. I have a similar problem with Regions of Queensland which is based on the view of one Qld you Govt Dept at one point in time despite the fact that other Qld Govt Dept's also divide the state into a various other sets of regions. The problem is that some region names have long-standing *usage* (e.g. Northern Beaches, the subject of previous arguments here in Misplaced Pages) but have no precise definitions. This then leads people to think everywhere must be in some kind of region and that there is some precise test to identify the region. Personally I think we would be better to back away from using regions for categories or in definitions in the lede para. I believe we should use LGAs for such purposes as these do have precise boundaries. I think with these ill-defined regions, we should follow the guidance of WP:NPOV and say (not in the lede para, but the geography section) something like "Smallville is sometimes described as being in the Nasty Region and sometimes in the Nice Region ." In my experience these disputes tend to follow the pattern of places in Nasty Region being redefined as being in the Nice Region rather than vice versa, which I presume is because it suits the real estate agents and residents to affiliate the suburb with the nicer region. Kerry (talk) 03:51, 28 May 2021 (UTC)

Regions, Sub-regions, & Districts of Victoria

I have updated the list of regions and sub-regions on Template:Victoria to reflect those listed on the Victorian Government sites. See discussion Template talk:Victoria#Sub regions. -- ThylacineHunter (talk) 04:10, 19 November 2021 (UTC)

Peer review

Kardinya, Western Australia is at peer review as a potential WP:FAC. Any and all comments would be welcome. Steelkamp (talk) 06:14, 8 March 2022 (UTC)

"Nearest neighbours" or "suburbs around" in Infobox

Opinions are sought at Template_talk:Infobox_Australian_place#Nearest_neighbours as to how to handle boundary cases - eg what is displayed for "suburbs around ..." when the suburb is on the coast and there isn't another suburb on one side of the suburb. Mitch Ames (talk) 05:31, 19 March 2022 (UTC)

User script to detect unreliable sources

Main page: User:Headbomb/unreliable

I have (with the help of others) made a small user script to detect and highlight various links to unreliable sources and predatory journals. Some of you may already be familiar with it, given it is currently the 39th most imported script on Misplaced Pages. The idea is that it takes something like

  • John Smith "Article of things" Deprecated.com. Accessed 2020-02-14. (John Smith "" ''Deprecated.com''. Accessed 2020-02-14.)

and turns it into something like

It will work on a variety of links, including those from {{cite web}}, {{cite journal}} and {{doi}}.

The script is mostly based on WP:RSPSOURCES, WP:NPPSG and WP:CITEWATCH and a good dose of common sense. I'm always expanding coverage and tweaking the script's logic, so general feedback and suggestions to expand coverage to other unreliable sources are always welcomed.

Do note that this is not a script to be mindlessly used, and several caveats apply. Details and instructions are available at User:Headbomb/unreliable. Questions, comments and requests can be made at User talk:Headbomb/unreliable.

- Headbomb {t · c · p · b}

This is a one time notice and can't be unsubscribed from. Delivered by: MediaWiki message delivery (talk) 16:00, 29 April 2022 (UTC)

Williamsdale Wikidata links

Williamsdale Wikidata links should link to Williamsdale, New South Wales, not Williamsdale, Australian Capital Territory. Willimsdale was split in 1913 and now Williamsdale, NSW has some population as a rural commuter area while Williamsdale, ACT is effectively greenbelt. The ABS links in particular are a concern with the automatic linking of population figures, but others such as Allhomes, GeoNames and theOpenStreetMap also link to the wrong Willimsdale. Could somebody who knows how to chnage these links please fix this.--Grahame (talk) 02:28, 4 September 2022 (UTC)

GAR Notice

Bayswater, Western Australia has been nominated for a community good article reassessment. If you are interested in the discussion, please participate by adding your comments to the reassessment page. If concerns are not addressed during the review period, the good article status may be removed from the article. Onegreatjoke (talk) 01:38, 21 January 2023 (UTC)

Victorian Localities & Suburbs

This is in relation to the undoing of recent updates to locations listed on templates in Category:Victoria (Australia) local government area templates...
After updating locations in Victorian Local Government Areas (LGA's), a question has been asked of me as to what is defined as "Town", "Locality", "City", "Suburb", etc.? I haven't been able to find a proper definition for "Town", "Locality", "City", "Suburb".
Technically according to Data set for localities accessed via Mapshare, all 4 of these are listed as "Localities".
For some places, calling it a "Town" sounded a lot better than calling it a "Locality". What makes a "City" different from a "Town"? possibly it's size? And as for "Suburbs", they are a bit confusing as whether it is a "Suburb" or "Town" (While metro areas are suburbs yet in regional Vic they are towns, unless they are part of a bigger city area like Bendigo where they are suburbs, and when the population is under 10 they are a locality).
I would like to get some clarification on this as I have spent around 2 weeks going through and checking all 2,978 localities that belong in the 79 LGA's in Victoria only to have those in the metropolitan area reverted to their old lists. -- ThylacineHunter (talk) 10:56, 10 February 2023 (UTC)

I defined them as:
  • City - population over 10000
  • Town - population between 10000 & 200
  • Locality - population under 200 (there are a few "ghost towns" with little or no population)
  • Suburb - ignored as it wasn't clearly defined
I'm happy to redefine the population values if needed. As I did this using an excel table with formulas, I will easily be able to recreate all relevant page. If on the other hand it is decided to define them not using population values, this will be a lot harder to update.
Also, not sure if others are aware of this useful template, Template:VICcity. -- ThylacineHunter (talk) 10:59, 10 February 2023 (UTC)
There is a little problem with your definition of a city with the City of Latrobe. With a population of 75,000, it definitely fits, but within it are the "towns" of Moe, Morwell and Traralgon, each of which has more than 10,000 people. They were once, in fact, all officially individual cities, but the Kennett municipal mergers of the 1990s removed that status. In the same region too is Sale, with a population of 15,000, again, once a city, but now part of the Shire of Wellington. It's hard to create rigid rules on these matters. HiLo48 (talk) 00:12, 11 February 2023 (UTC)
You are more or less talking to yourself here...
https://pageviews.wmcloud.org/?project=en.wikipedia.org&platform=all-access&agent=user&redirects=0&range=latest-90&pages=Wikipedia_talk:WikiProject_Australian_places
it might help to go to the oz noticeboard - but the people who were involved
in nutting it all out probably over 10 years ago... and probably not still around...

JarrahTree 11:13, 10 February 2023 (UTC)

I had commented on the user talk pages with a link to this topic for those involved with reverting recent updates involving this issue, I have also added a link to both the WP:VIC and WP:AUS talk pages. -- ThylacineHunter (talk) 11:19, 10 February 2023 (UTC)
I think that defining places based solely on their population can be problematic. In the past what I've done to determine the difference between a town and a locality is to drop myself into the place on google maps. If there's a township there, it's probably a town, if its just a few farmhouses and fields then a locality. I live in a locality myself, it has a population of 600 but the closest thing we have to a "township" is a single hall and a tennis court. Obviously it takes much longer to research but it's more accurate.

As for what constitutes a suburb, Suburbs_and_localities_(Australia) is what I've been going by. But I would agree that a suburb is a type of a locality that is an extension of a city.

Template:VICcity, its useful but very prone to creating redlinks in my experience. Viatori (talk) 11:52, 10 February 2023 (UTC)

All of habitable Australia is divided into localities. These are officially bounded areas. The term "suburb" is often used when a locality is part of an urban area. Towns and cities are normally defined as centrepoints of urban areas (they are not bounded as the extent of them varies over time) and there are no particular population thresholds involved. Local government areas are defined with boundaries and represent a different overlay to localities (indeed, local government boundaries sometimes split a locality -- this occurs more in rural areas than in urban areas); sometimes local government area names use terms like "town" or "city" but their use is generally historic. Historically, there were distinctions between towns and cities based on things like "has a cathedral" (I think that was a UK definition that we inherited) or based on a population theshold (which each state determined and which changed over time as the population grew). Because our urban populations are growing so much in Australia, in most states we have seen the major capital cities grow to encompass what were once independent towns or cities into vast urban areas, making it difficult to ambiguously identify individual cities or towns any more. This is why we have stopped using towns and cities for addressing in favour of localities/suburbs and why towns and cities are now just points on the map to denote the centre points of those places. Because being a city rather than a town was once a source of great local pride, people are still obsessed with calling a place a city if they can. The term that now seems to be preferred is "population centre", but it's not a term that necessarily resonates with the Misplaced Pages readers I suspect. When I write about Queensland (where we have "population centres" and no cities/towns in the official place names database), I tend to use the term "city" (as in "The city was founded in 1845 ...") where the place was historically a city but use "town" otherwise. We are not here to do original research. So I think if an argument breaks out over whether something is a "city" or not, then the person making that claim it's a city needs to present a reliable citation that it was at some time officially a city. Kerry (talk) 21:38, 10 February 2023 (UTC)
Because I have similar issues with Qld geography, I have an ongoing correspondence with the QLD Place Names Database team about some of these things. They have been very helpful. So you might find it helpful to talk to the equivalent VIC Govt people to get their understanding of the situation. Kerry (talk) 22:01, 10 February 2023 (UTC)
This document (which is referenced from the Gazetteer of Australia) contains the comprehensive list of geographical feature types. In terms of this discussion, the ones worth noting are below (direct quotes):
  • LOCALITY: An administrative bounded area distinguished for its community and/or landscape characteristics: in metropolitan areas it is commonly referred to as a ‘suburb’; it provides an official reference point for addressing purposes (page 41)
  • TOWN SITE: An original crown subdivision of land within a PARISH or HUNDRED which has officially recognised and gazetted boundaries. (page 39)
  • POPULATED PLACE (pages 41-42)
    • NEIGHBOURHOOD: Does not have officially recognised and registered boundaries hence an unbounded locality: for this reason a neighbourhood name cannot be used for addressing purposes (GNR)
    • OUTCAMP: Small Aboriginal community outside of the main community
    • POPULATION CENTRE: A significant place where there is permanent human habitation, infrastructure and services.
    • SETTLEMENT: A small rural community, typically outside a larger urban area.
But it is important to note what is not mentioned at all is a definition for TOWN or CITY (TOWN SITE being a historical term) to support my claim that these are no longer officially-used terminology. Nor does this document define URBAN AREA even though they use it in their own definitions; I guess our intuitive understanding of that term applies. Kerry (talk) 22:32, 10 February 2023 (UTC)
Thanks to kerry and hilo for their views on the issue. Very careful examination of archives in a this project and some select Australian talk page archives will show the issue has been bashed around for some considerable time by now, but in most cases most of the participants in the earlier conversations have moved on in one way or other.
Usage and discussion about 'city' and 'suburb' and 'town' have wasted vast amounts of time in this project and other talk pages, and locality is preferred in many state projects. Determining anything by 'size' of population has the wrong leg being tackled, it is always a variable, as opposed to a name which is a constant.
Exceptionalism - where the terminology or usage in a state is isolated and separated from other parts of Australia, is something that should be discouraged, consistency and uniformity I would hope is a more positive affirmation for the larger project. JarrahTree 01:33, 11 February 2023 (UTC)
I like the discussion this has produced. I'm happy to go with what is defined under LOCALITY above, and using just one undivided list in the navbox and changing the navbox titles to "Localities and suburbs in ..." or "Suburbs and localities in ..." for each of the LGA's. -- ThylacineHunter (talk) 05:40, 11 February 2023 (UTC)

Stony Head, 41°00'00.0"S, 147°00'00.0"E

Editors are asked to contribute to a discussion at Talk:Stony Head, Tasmania § 41°00'00.0"S, 147°00'00.0"E, as to whether:

  • It's worth mentioning that an arbitrary non-notable geographic point is within Stony Head
  • If it is worth mentioning, whether a citation is required to verify that fact

Mitch Ames (talk) 11:45, 27 February 2023 (UTC)

Infobox montage -- new design

I have noticed that cities such as São Paulo, New York, Mexico City, Los Angeles and Boston are utilising a new style for their infobox montages. Instead of having the caption below the montage, the captions are underneath each individual image making it easier for the reader. Would this be acceptable for our cities' infobox montages? Ashton 29 (talk) 02:18, 21 March 2023 (UTC)

Project-independent quality assessments

Quality assessments are used by Misplaced Pages editors to rate the quality of articles in terms of completeness, organization, prose quality, sourcing, etc. Most wikiprojects follow the general guidelines at Misplaced Pages:Content assessment, but some have specialized assessment guidelines. A recent Village pump proposal was approved and has been implemented to add a |class= parameter to {{WikiProject banner shell}}, which can display a general quality assessment for an article, and to let project banner templates "inherit" this assessment.

No action is required if your wikiproject follows the standard assessment approach. Over time, quality assessments will be migrated up to {{WikiProject banner shell}}, and your project banner will automatically "inherit" any changes to the general assessments for the purpose of assigning categories.

However, if your project decides to "opt out" and follow a non-standard quality assessment approach, all you have to do is modify your wikiproject banner template to pass {{WPBannerMeta}} a new |QUALITY_CRITERIA=custom parameter. If this is done, changes to the general quality assessment will be ignored, and your project-level assessment will be displayed and used to create categories, as at present. Aymatth2 (talk) 14:32, 9 April 2023 (UTC)

Official renaming of Fraser Island to K'gari

As of 7 June 2023, both the geographical feature and locality Fraser Island are officially renamed K'gari.. Comments sought on:

203.8.131.32 (talk) 05:52, 7 June 2023 (UTC)

Australian Statistical Geography Standard - draft page

I'm working on a draft of a page (here) about the standard, as with the arrival of Module:PopulationFromWikidata I thought an introduction to its data source structure would be useful. However I don't want to go too far until others agree it's worth it. Please let me know on the talk page for it. Innesw (talk) 07:26, 10 September 2023 (UTC)

Towns and related Localities

User:Wikibility has over the past few days started making a considerable number of edits to the infoboxes of articles on (particularly Victorian) places. A look at at least some of these edits - adding areas, adding lists of adjacent localities, adding local_map=yes - seems to be equating 'towns' (for want of a potentially less divisive term - this is not the place for that discussion!) to SALs with the same name. Especially in rural areas, I'm not convinced this equivalance is valid. The articles are generally about the towns, not the SALs which can have much larger geographic areas. The added areas, local maps and lists of adjacent localities are for the SALs.

This process may appear valid when the population figures (especially those shown due to Module:PopulationFromWikidata) are for the SALs, but when the UCL population figures are eventually loaded into Wikidata they will not be for the area in the infobox or the area shown on the local map, and any calculation of population density will also become innacurate.

I have left a message on User:Wikibility's talk page asking them to pause their editing process and join the discussion here. Innesw (talk) 11:30, 19 September 2023 (UTC)

Hi @Innesw, I had a look over the last few to figure out if there was a miss-match. Correct me if I'm wrong but you're saying the Misplaced Pages page for the town should only represent the town centre and not the locality but has the locality population listed as the population?
Here's the method I used.
I cross referenced the population from Misplaced Pages which corresponds to its underlying Wikidata item, this also matched the linked ABS stats. The ABS map boundary data also matches that of OpenStreetMap and GeoNames which corresponds to vicmap, the latter being where the area can be extracted. The linked OpenStreetMap entity in Wikidata also produces the same boundary in the tWikimedia commons infobox automatically. Wikibility (talk) 08:00, 20 September 2023 (UTC)
I'm pretty much saying exactly that: the articles are usually about the town - the built-up area - while the census data currently in Wikidata, and the boundaries in vicmap and from there presumably into OSM and the infobox local_map maps, is about a Locality that (a) has the same name as the town, but (b) can have a much larger area and an additional (rural) population. The existing data seems to be about the Localities that are designed to cover the whole of Australia without gaps or overlaps, they are not designed to represent towns. They are referred to by the ABS as 'Suburbs and Localities' (SAL), but they are specified by the state/territory governments, not the ABS. What does better represent a 'town' is the ABS-defined 'Urban Centres and Localities' (UCL). Unfortunately no census data for these has yet been imported into Wikidata.
From what you say about the map sources, no map data for UCLs exists either (except on the ABS website). You know the map sources better than me - all I'm going on is what local_map=yes produces in the infobox.
PS: I do wish the term 'locality' was used with only one meaning when talking geographical statistics etc., but unfortunately it has two that can be quite different, and it can make things confused. Innesw (talk) 13:04, 20 September 2023 (UTC)
Wikibility I've just re-read your first reply, and my apologies - you asked if the WP articles should only be about the town, not the formal locality with its larger area. No I'm not insisting on that, but observing that articles usually are about the urban town, and therefore the stats and maps should reflect that - but often don't at the moment. Admittedly there are articles about the localities (eg: Limestone), but particularly when the existence of the locality is the only reason for an article that is likely to stay a forever-stub, I wonder whether if they really meet notability requirements. Innesw (talk) 23:35, 20 September 2023 (UTC)
As this conversation appears to be between two recent editors, I do hope you realise that aspects of this conversation have been gone through a few times in the last 15 years or so - the full range of the points - the problem is that most of the discussants from the past have either left wikipedia or whatever. The question is whether anyone is prepared to find the historic precedent points - where the abs 'suburb' (a perennial trap) or the town/locality problems - were established by earlier generation editors. It appears that wikipedia in general has not got a good mechanism for clarifying where and how decisions within a particular subject area can be established and left in a point where later editors do not have to re invent things... or for that matter go on goose chases where things already have been established. JarrahTree 00:48, 21 September 2023 (UTC)
So it seems newish editors have little choice at the moment, if they want to find out what established good practice might be in this space, but to trawl through the talk-page archives of (a) this project and (b) perhaps WP:WikiProject_Australia and determine for themselves what proposed practices have been accepted. As you say, not the best way to avoid re-invention or unnecessary discussion.
And by 'this space' I mean something fairly limited: the relationship between WP articles on Australian places and ABS / ASGS information. At the moment this is primarily about the contents of the infobox, but I could see it being wider. Innesw (talk) 13:56, 21 September 2023 (UTC)
Thanks for the reply - all it needs someone generous with time to trawl through the archive to find the earlier discussions, and offer the diffs. to either clarify if whether they are still relevant (or not), in the knowledge that more recent developments might require careful re-statements. However it is very possible that abs changes over time might well establish newer standards that have altered the criterion from ten years ago or whatever. There are also now indeed correlations with wikidata (less than ten years) - that actually render parts of the infoboxes redundant, however the changes that involve wikidata and external data changes with abs or other bodies - probably need to be re-stated at some stage.
The great thing is to see newish editors attempting to develop a consensus on found info - maybe in the end the earlier discussions are found to be redundant! You never know... JarrahTree 14:10, 21 September 2023 (UTC)
It's a project I'm going to have a go at, though it will probably take a while just to establish the process and format, let alone gather the information and get new consensus.
A couple of questions:
  • are there any other forums (apart from the two talk archives mentioned above) I should be looking at?
  • I'm thinking of (a) an information-gathering (and presumably discussion) page leading to (b) an essay, with the drafts in my userspace. Is this the best way to go, or are there better places to create these things?
Innesw (talk) 23:19, 21 September 2023 (UTC)
In answer to your questions, this is it. It might seem a bit like an echo chamber.

Well up until a day or so go this was, in a literal sense, the isolated outlier of the known universe - see https://pageviews.wmcloud.org/?project=en.wikipedia.org&platform=all-access&agent=user&redirects=0&range=latest-90&pages=Wikipedia_talk:WikiProject_Australian_places

Whether any of the watchers might even choose to venture to comment, then that is the old problem of lurking versus the actual silence that usually follows.

There are significant carry over issues between wikidata and this set of problems. Well worth exploring whether the australian project participants inside wikidata might want to join in here as well. JarrahTree 01:06, 22 September 2023 (UTC)

Hmmm, we are in a bit of a backwater, aren't we (I)! Still, I'll pull together the history of the issues in a userspace page (here), to avoid clogging up the history of the backwater with lots of changes, and present a coherent result when I'm done. Hopefully we can get a wider interest after that. Innesw (talk) 23:37, 22 September 2023 (UTC)

WikiProject Bendigo needs you!

WikiProject Bendigo is currently seeking interested editors to join the project. If interested, please add your name to the project's participants list and start editing! Lotsw73 (talk) 05:17, 30 January 2024 (UTC)

Invitation to participate in infobox discussion

Hi everyone. I invite you all to participate in the discussion on Misplaced Pages talk:Manual of Style/Infoboxes#City related articles infoboxes to come to a common interpretation about the infobox image format for the city related articles. It would be of a great help. 456legendtalk 16:52, 6 March 2024 (UTC)

Inconsistencies in Distances Given Between Locations

I have noticed that the infoboxes for many Australian places are inconsistent in whether they measure distances between places by road or as the crow flies. For example, the pages of many smaller cities such as Sale, Victoria often give the distances by road whereas pages for larger cities such as Perth tend to show direct distances, typically citing https://geodesyapps.ga.gov.au/distance. Template:Infobox Australian place states that distances should be by road, though I am unsure how strictly the template needs to be adhered to.

I have even noticed such an inconsistency within a single article: The page for Melbourne gave the distance from Canberra as 659 km (the distance by road), while giving the direct distances to other cities - erroneously implying that Melbourne is closer to Adelaide than it is to Canberra. For now I have changed the distance to be the direct figure of 466 km to match the other distances in the article, but I am wondering if going forward my future edits should adhere strictly to the infobox template and always give the distance by road. Timbrhoggvandi (talk) 08:42, 19 May 2024 (UTC)

If the template says road distances, then it should be road distances, which is easy enough to do with Google Maps (or similar tool). The only real problem I find is with islands without bridges, where clearly there cannot be road distances. But, like any infobox field, if the situation is more complex than the capacity of the infobox to represent, don't put a value in the infobox but explain the more complex situation in the article body, where you are free to use any kind of distance (although I would suggest making clear whether you are using road distances or direct distances). Kerry (talk) 22:46, 10 June 2024 (UTC)
I have notice this too. I have fixed this on many articles of places around Melbourne's south-east but I can not fix all of the Australian places Infoboxes. I was just wandering where I would be able to post this issue so that other people in this project could help address this issue and fix it. Zakary2012 (talk) 09:36, 7 July 2024 (UTC)

Module (Lua) version of Infobox Australian place

There is now a Lua version of the whole of Template:Infobox Australian place, open for testing. The Module (lua) code is at Module:Sandbox/Innesw/Infobox Australian place, the template to call to test the module is {{Sandbox/Innesw/Infobox Australian place}}. There is a testcases page, based on the testcases for the original template. Please put comments and (especially negative) test results either here or on the module talk page. Innesw (talk) 06:38, 29 May 2024 (UTC)

What is it supposed to be doing that's new, different, better? Kerry (talk) 02:31, 1 June 2024 (UTC)
Nothing much - yet. It's the first stage in a two stage process. I do have a number of ideas for changes to the template, but changes will be much easier to implement in a module rather than in template code.
If people are happy with the module version, ie: that it doesn't produce output importantly different from the original, I'll start putting up proposals for changes. Some of these will be pretty minor, others will likely need more lengthy discussion. Innesw (talk) 00:00, 9 June 2024 (UTC)
Yes, but why did you make the change? What is the benefit? If it is part of a larger plan, please disclose it. This is an infobox used in many articles. Kerry (talk) 22:52, 10 June 2024 (UTC)
  1. "Suburbs and Localities". Australia Bureau of Statistics. Retrieved 2023-09-10.
  2. "Urban Centres and Localities". Australia Bureau of Statistics. Retrieved 2023-09-10.
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