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Please stop linking to a non-existent article which is about a paper not significant enough to use as a source

I thought that would have been clear from my comment above. We only wikilink to articles, you haven't shown evidence that there will ever be an article, and it's simply not significant enough (ie not enough reliable sources discuss it) to be in our articles. Doug Weller talk 10:17, 2 June 2018 (UTC)

Kiffian and Tenerian cultures

I've also reverted you here. That National Geographic article is not a reliable source for the dates of these cultures, and if you read their articles they show different dates.

Your edit also didn't tie in with the rest of the article, which was about changes in technology and agriculture. It also suggested that Tenerian culture (although I'm not sure that "industry" isn't a better word", was only found at that one archaeological site. There was also a problem with your grammar that you should know about, we don't talk about "in" an archaeological site but "at" a site. Doug Weller talk 10:31, 2 June 2018 (UTC)

Please don't copy material you find elsewhere online

 

Hello. I am Diannaa and I am a Wikipedia administrator. I have removed several copyright violations from History of West Africa, material you added on June 10 and 11. Prose you find online is almost always copyright, and cannot be copied here; it's against the law and the copyright policy of this website to do so. All prose must be written in your own words. There's more information about copyrights and how it applies to Wikipedia at Wikipedia:FAQ/Copyright. Copyright law and its application are complex matters, and you should not edit any more until you have taken the time to read and understand our copyright policy. Further copyright violations will result in you being blocked from editing. — Diannaa 🍁 (talk) 11:48, 12 June 2018 (UTC)

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