Wikipedia:WikiProject Mountains

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Mountains of the Alps, British and Irish hills, New Hampshire Mountains
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Welcome to WikiProject Mountains.

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

Scope

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

Portal

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

Parentage

The parent of this WikiProject is WikiProject Geography.

Descendant Wikiprojects

Similar Wikiprojects

Agenda

A list of articles needing cleanup associated with this project is available. See also the tool's wiki page and the index of WikiProjects.

Participants

User Areas of interest Comments
RedWolf (talk · contribs) Canadian Rockies, Mountains in Nepal Have been hiking and scrambling in the Canadian Rockies for many years. Visited Nepal in 2002 and trekked to Mt. Everest. Reached 20,000 ft (6100 metres) on a peak SE of Everest.
Hike395 (talk · contribs) The Sierra Nevada, and to some extent the Rocky Mountains and Pacific Coast Ranges
William M. Connolley (talk · contribs) Im just starting on the Ecrins; see User:William M. Connolley/Ecrins if interested.
MONGO (talk · contribs)
Blinutne (talk · contribs)
Nationalparks (talk · contribs) I've been adding the template whenever I can (example Fajada Butte), and starting new stub articles (example Twilight Peak).
pmc (talk · contribs) features of Western Canada, particularly things associated with the Alpine Club of Canada (i.e. huts)
spireguy (talk · contribs) Various world peaks, US peaks; interested in peaks with great local relief; lately did a bunch on the fourteeners
Daniel Case (talk · contribs) Mountains of New York State and New Jersey, primarily Catskills Hoping to get Slide Mountain up to FA status one day
Dentren (talk · contribs) South Andean mountains Created Mocho-Choshuenco, will soon climb it
Darwinek (talk · contribs) Mostly volcanoes and areas with less attention (Africa etc.).
jrbouldin (talk · contribs) Western USA, esp Pacific States, esp CA
Tsylos (talk · contribs) Mountains in BC Updating current mountains in BC with the Mountain Template
Seattle Skier (talk · contribs) Volcanoes, worldwide and especially the Pacific Ring of Fire and Cascades; mountains of Alaska, BC, Antarctica Created Volcanic Seven Summits, Thirteener, numerous articles about Cascade volcanoes, plus other volcanoes and mountains
Justin.Johnsen (talk · contribs) Mountains of California Elevation standardization to  NAVD 88 in North America.
Ericoides (talk · contribs) Alps, Pyrenees
GeoWriter (talk · contribs) geology, particularly volcanoes
ALK (talk · contribs) Alaska's 16'ers
Viewfinder (talk · contribs) General, but with particular interest in the accuracy of peak heights and topographic prominence
Buaidh (talk · contribs) The mountains of North America, the Rocky Mountains, the cartography of North America, topographic prominence, topographic isolation. Mountain peaks of the Rocky Mountains, Mountain peaks of North America, Mountain peaks of Canada, Mountain peaks of México, Mountain peaks of the United States, Mountain peaks of Alaska, Mountain peaks of California, Mountain peaks of Colorado, Mountain ranges of Colorado, Mountain passes of Colorado.
Volcanoguy (talk · contribs) Igneous mountains of Canada Created numerous Canadian volcano articles.
Jespinos (talk · contribs) Southern Andes
Droll (talk · contribs) Oregon, Nevada and California mountains in that order Been working on mountain articles on and off for awhile. Figured I'd join on.
Ahtih (talk · contribs) Himalayas and Andes Mostly creating or improving stub/start class articles and contributing photos.
Kborland (talk · contribs) Reading Prong and Blue Ridge Mountains Working on articles for individual ridges and summits.
Zacharie Grossen (talk · contribs) Alps Trying to improve some articles, creating stubs
arbogastlw (talk · contribs) Appalachian Mountains Working on mountain ranges, peaks and passes of Virginia, West Virginia and Maryland
Av9 (talk · contribs) Volcanoes and high, glaciated mountains Edited Mount Cleveland (Alaska) page
DiverDave (talk · contribs) Mountains in Antarctica, North America, and South America Created numerous pages for Australian Antarctic Territory, East Antarctica, and Mountains of Antarctica categories
Mike Cline (talk · contribs) Interested in expanding coverage of mountains and ranges associated with Yellowstone National Park, Montana and Wyoming Avid fly fisherman from Bozeman, MT with a passion for Montana and Yellowstone history.
Tea with toast (talk · contribs) Rocky Mountains, among other wonderful places
Cullen328 (talk · contribs) Sierra Nevada, Mount Shasta, Cascades I also work on biographies of mountaineers, and mountaineering equipment
Mmcannis (talk · contribs) Arizona or
Lower Colorado River
Valley Mtn ranges
(AZ-Nevada-Calif-(or Sonora))
(195 ranges in Arizona)
Lately working on Madrean Sky Islands area of southeast AZ, (or associated, valleys, etc.)
Xufanc (talk · contribs) Many, many articles, including Mountains of Aragon, List of mountains in Thailand, Serra del Montsià, Doi Nang Non, Breast shaped hills I like mountain hiking and I am fascinated by mountains large and small. I also like to learn about the anthropologic/ethnologic significance of mountains, like the origin of their name or local myths surrounding their shape.

My way: I prefer to write short articles, preferably with a good picture if available, sticking to the very basic information about the mountain or range in question, rather than overwhelming the reader with loads of information which IMO only buries the basic, useful data.

Wikimedes (talk · contribs) 8000ers Would like to add info on 1st ascent books written by first ascenders and other books of interest, and on relative difficulties and dangers of climbing the 8000ers.
The Interior (talk · contribs) Columbia, Coast, and Rocky Mountains of Western Canada Expanding stubs on mountains, template work, cleanup, images (my own, PD flickr uploads, existing Commons images), categories, etc.
HueSatLum (talk · contribs) Seven Summits Trying to get all Seven Summits to FA.
Bs4173 (talk · contribs) Mainly Colorado Afraid of heights.
Rufus Hawthorne (talk · contribs) Columbias, Canadian Rockies
SymmetricalMegalomania (talk · contribs) Allgäu and Ammergau Alps Expanding stubs about mountains in the Allgäu and Ammergau Alps by translating the corresponding German articles to English.
Gilderien (talk · contribs) Mountains wherever I go, mainly the UK, US, and France. DYK mountain articles
Afasmit (talk · contribs) Alps, height lists, mountaineering history About 9 years in now. Added lots of mountains and climbing history. Created and maintain the lists of highest mountains of the world (with the help of Viewfinder (talk · contribs)), of Africa, of the Alps (in three parts for it got a bit big), of Austria and of New Guinea. Rewrote and currently working on a fair List of first ascents.
Arbustum (talk · contribs) Polish, Czech and Central Europe mountain ranges Being Polish and visiting the mountains yearly, I really want to share new knowledge and create new pages about mountain ranges, mountains and physical parts of mountains.
Paul H. (talk · contribs) As a geologist and geomorphologist who lives in a state devoid of significant topography, I have an avocational interest in the tectonic geomorphology and glacial geology of mountains and hills. I find it fascinating how structural geology and surficial processes interact to create and shape mountains, hills, and other landforms.
SoSivr (talk · contribs) article Mt (mount)
kellnerp (talk · contribs) Currently living in Korea and climbing and photographing Mountains in and around Seoul and Gyeongi-Do. While studying Korean I fell in love with hiking and climbing. The mountains are a popular place for many Koreans to hike, and a great deal of history both modern and ancient can be found there in it's original setting. Mountains in Korea are easily accesible with generally well established trail systems allowing frequent visits to be easily made.
Brianwhalley (talk · contribs) British Isles, Norway, Karakorum, Alaska I am a geologist/geomorphologist/glaciologist with a general interest in mountains, especially geomorphological processes.
Nick Moyes (talk · contribs) European Alps I'm a naturalist and mountaineer who's climbed the majority of the Alpine 4000m peaks (I'm missing the hardest ones for some reason!) and I'm shocked by how poorly they and the first ascensionists are covered here on on Wikipedia. Do come and join the WP:Alps group if you want to put your name down to support work to improve them. Joined 2015.
Wren King (talk · contribs) Ring of Fire and Coastal Mountains of North America Alaska
Shawarma98 (talk · contribs) Working on Kedarnath Mountain Uttranchal, India
Flyinsoulboy (talk · contribs) Working on Darchula District and Api (mountain) Darchula, Nepal
BrettA343 (talk · contribs) Canadian Rockies, primarily around the Columbia, Wapta/Waputik and Lyell Icefields; mainly for simple hiking and mountaineering. I'm an ex-mountaineer, ex-photographer, ex-IT consultant and ex-submariner (i.e. I'm retired... I started mountaineering late in life - in my forties - and after five not-spectacularly-successful knee operations, don't do much at all of what I used to love in the mountains).
Goutam1962 (talk · contribs) Currently working on List of mountain peaks of Uttarakhand Trekker, photographer and wondering in Garhwal Himalaya for 35 years
Tryfan777 (talk · contribs) Alps (esp. those in the German-speaking regions), Snowdonia
Zapus (talk · contribs) Southern Rockies
Chongkian (talk · contribs) Mountains in Taiwan
Wolfgang8741 (talk · contribs) Infobox consistency and project tagging work mainly
CycloneFootball71 (talk · contribs) I am generally interested in the mountains of Western America and Canada, like the Cascade Range I am a (somewhat) prolific hiker, and I enjoy making my way up to the top of various peaks.
ARoseWolf Brooks Range, Alaska Range, Chilkat Range in Alaska. Rocky Mountains, Flathead Range, Lewis and Clark Range, Lewis Range, Bridger Range in Montana
Gdoehne (talk · contribs) Sierra Nevada and San Gabriel mountain ranges. Have climbed, camped, backpacked, and traversed a lot of the San Gabriel and Southern Sierra especially. Interested in improving stub/start articles there as well as starting articles for unadded peaks.
Ozmorph (talk · contribs) Wikidata-powered Infobox mountain template. My dream is to see all basic mountain data officially referenced and available to any Wikipedia language through Wikidata.
JJBarrott (talk · contribs) Climate change adaptation in mountains. Adding information on how climate change is impacting mountains and the communities residing in and reliant on them.
KilimAnnejaro (talk · contribs) Mountain geology, particularly in Colorado and the Himalayas. Trying to add information on how mountains are formed and what they look like geologically.
Cascadiacomrade (talk · contribs) Mountains of the Pacific Northwest, specifically in BC and WA. Currently creating articles about notable backpacking trails and mountains that are missing from Wikipedia.
Ds2320 (talk · contribs) General

Inactive/Alumni

User Last edit
Dabean (talk · contribs) 2021
Petersent (talk · contribs) 2018
Caealn (talk · contribs) 2017
Obfucius (talk · contribs) 2017
Racerx11 (talk · contribs) 2017
Soumit ban (talk · contribs) 2017
Maveric149 (talk · contribs) 2017
JMiall (talk · contribs) 2017
Stewartadcock (talk · contribs) 2016
Greatestrowerever (talk · contribs) 2016
Ktr101 (talk · contribs) 2016
Samar (talk · contribs) 2016
Star-Syrup (talk · contribs) 2016
Roland Neave (talk · contribs) 2016
Skookum1 (talk · contribs) 2016
Berland (talk · contribs) 2016
Mehmet Karatay (talk · contribs) 2016
Geofferybard (talk · contribs) 2014
Knowing guy (talk · contribs) 2014
Nabil rais2008 (talk · contribs) 2014
Little Mountain 5 (talk · contribs) 2014
Imars (talk · contribs) 2014
Will Beback (talk · contribs) 2014
JohnK92 (talk · contribs) 2013
Curtaintoad (talk · contribs) 2013
Wabba The I (talk · contribs) 2013
Pseudois (talk · contribs) 2013
ColoradoZ (talk · contribs) 2013
RideABicycle (talk · contribs) 2013
Qyd (talk · contribs) 2013
Anshulkumardhiman (talk · contribs) 2012
Draconrex (talk · contribs) 2012
mypyrex (talk · contribs) 2012
Kataiklaeya (talk · contribs) 2012
John Wormell (talk · contribs) 2011
Patton1138 (talk · contribs) 2011
Alojmm (talk · contribs) 2011
Jarfingle (talk · contribs) 2011
Johntex (talk · contribs) 2011
John Wormell (talk · contribs) 2011
Schmed2000 (talk · contribs) 2010
ContrillionAU (talk · contribs) 2010
Starzynka (talk · contribs) 2010
Nomadtales (talk · contribs) 2010
Paul Mundt (talk · contribs) 2009
Throughthelens (talk · contribs) 2009
Mstanic (talk · contribs) 2009
PelionClimber (talk · contribs) 2009
Hydrogen Iodide (talk · contribs) 2009
Phenz (talk · contribs) 2008
HistoryIntern (talk · contribs) 2008
Michael Campbell (talk · contribs) 2007
Sammy9990 (talk · contribs) 2007
Jfg284 (talk · contribs) 2006

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Structure

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

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

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

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

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

Categorization

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

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

Category:Mountains

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

Hierarchy Definition

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

General Strategy and Discussion forums

Templates

Mount Baker
Mount Baker from the northeast
Highest point
Elevation10,778 ft (3,285 m)
Prominence8,881 ft (2,707 m)
ListingUltra
Coordinates48°46′40.8″N 121°48′43.2″W / 48.778000°N 121.812000°W / 48.778000; -121.812000
Geography
LocationWashington, United States
Parent rangeCascade Range
Topo mapUSGS Mount Baker
Geology
Age of rock<30 Kyr
Mountain typeStratovolcano
Volcanic arc/beltCascade Volcanic Arc
Last eruption1880
Climbing
First ascent1868 by Edmund T. Coleman and party
Easiest routerock/ice climb

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

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

It has many optional parameters:

Parameter Description
name Name of the mountain.
photo Name of the image file, preferably providing a view that shows the bulk of the mountain. Do not include the File: or Image: prefix as this is done automatically by the template.
photo_size Width in pixels (px) of the photo. If this template line is not included, the default width is 285px. Note, however, if it is included without a parameter value, the photo may not display properly.
photo_caption Description of the photo; the text is displayed below the image.
range The mountain range if applicable.
prominence Topographic prominence if known. Please cite the source.
coordinates For use with {{coord}}.
topo Map authority and map name. For example, in Canada the National Topographic System (NTS) map number can be specified, or even calculated automatically from latitude and longitude using {{Canada NTS Grid}}. For the USA, the United States Geological Survey (USGS) map number can be specified.
type See List of mountain types.
volcanic_arc/belt If volcano, it may be part of a volcanic arc or volcanic belt.
age The geologic age of the rock. See geologic time scale.
last_eruption If volcano, last major eruption, not steam.
first_ascent If not a hike-up mountain, year and members of expedition.
easiest_route The easiest route to the summit. Examples include Hike, Scramble and any of the YDS grades.
grid_ref_uk For peaks in the United Kingdom, a grid reference such as from British national grid reference system.
grid_ref_ireland Grid reference for peaks in Ireland.
listing If peak belongs to well-known list of hills, e.g., Munros
translation If peak name is not English, it is good to provide a translation.
language If peak name is not English.
pronunciation If non-obvious


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

The previous multi-template is no longer used.

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

Assessment template

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

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

For lists, see Wikipedia:WikiProject Mountains/Assessment

Related, specialised infobox

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

Mountain Pass infobox

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

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

Mountain Range infobox

See the template page for list of fields.

Citation templates

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

Userboxes

Code Result
{{Template:User interest mountains}}
This user is interested in
Mountains.
Usage
{{Template:User WP Mountains}}
This user is a member of
WikiProject Mountains.
Usage
{{Template:User WikiProject Mountains}}
This user is a participant in
WikiProject Mountains.
Usage


Barnstar

The Mountainous Barnstar
{{{1}}}

Measurement units

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

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

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

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

U.S. vertical datum

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

Naming conventions

See also: Wikipedia:Naming conventions (landforms)

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

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

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

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

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

Picture Gallery

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

Resources

Some useful resources for information on mountains:

  • Himalayan Index - Peaks of the Himalaya over 6,000 metres
  • The Alpine Journal - 1926 to 2019
  • Canadian Mountain Encyclopedia Extensive index and climbing guide to Canadian, U.S. and Central American summits, passes and ranges
  • The Himalayan Journal - Journals of The Himalayan Club
  • Peakbagger.com Prominence, first ascent etc. for many peaks around the world
  • England - 50 Most Prominent Peaks includes latitude and longitude
  • CdnRockiesDatabases - Peaks of the Canadian Rockies (formerly known as Peakfinder.com)
  • Peaklist.org Exhaustive lists of peaks with a minimum prominence, including all mountains in the world with > 1500 m prominence
  • SummitPost
  • TopoQuest on-line topographic maps for the U.S.

Obsolete resources:

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

Government sources

  • Natural Resources Canada
    • Geographical Names of Canada Official source for geographical names in Canada
  • Instituto Nacional de Estadística, Geografía e Informática (INEGI) de México
    • Sistemas Nacionales Estadístico y de Información Geográfica (SNEIG)
  • U.S. National Geodetic Survey
    • NGS Datasheets Most accurate elevation and coordinates for peaks in the U.S.
    • NGVD 29 to NAVD 88 online elevation converter @ NGS
    • Geodetic Glossary @ NGS
  • U.S. Geological Survey
    • USGS Geographic Names Information System Official source for geographic names in the U.S.

Notes

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