Template:Did you know nominations/Texas antelope squirrel

The following discussion is an archived discussion of the DYK nomination of the article below. Please do not modify this page. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as this nomination's talk page, the article's talk page or Wikipedia talk:Did you know), unless there is consensus to re-open the discussion at this page. No further edits should be made to this page.

The result was: promoted by Froggerlaura ribbit 03:38, 28 January 2013 (UTC)

Texas antelope squirrel edit

  • ... that despite normally being grey, brown and white, one Texas antelope squirrel found in 1905 was tinted purple?

5x expanded by Miyagawa (talk). Self nom at 17:36, 13 January 2013 (UTC)

  • ~1800 chars, about 12x expansion
  • Cites inline to reputable-looking sources
  • Hook is brief, verified, and interesting (how many purple squirrels are there?)
  • Will continue review later Chris857 (talk) 04:00, 14 January 2013 (UTC)
  • Apologies for not getting back here sooner.
  • Article given light copyedit
  • Source agree with article content
  • I see no copyvio, though the one PDF is not OCR'd, so is inconvenient to fully search
Suggestions:
  • Can you merge the two IUCN refs, since they are identical pages?
  • Not necessary to passing, but a distribution map would be nice.
Chris857 (talk) 01:10, 20 January 2013 (UTC)
I've merged the two IUCN refs (in fact I hadn't realised that there was a separate citation template for them). I've never created a distribution map before, I thought it might have just been a case of drawing it onto a map but it seems that its a fair bit more complicated than that. Miyagawa (talk) 09:41, 20 January 2013 (UTC)
I'm not sure if there is any specific place to ask about distribution maps, though, for example, the map for Harris's antelope squirrel was made by user:rbrausse. You may want to ask him/her how they made it. Anyway, this passes for dyk. Chris857 (talk) 21:32, 20 January 2013 (UTC)