Article Evaluation

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1. Disneyland: [[1]] This article is very lengthy and very descriptive. It talks about the whole history of Disneyland and all the different attractions the land has. Each fact was represented with a reliable source with accurate information. Mostly everything in this article has to do with the topic. However, there is a section that talks about certain people that visited Disneyland which I found to be a little off topic and random. The article is very neutral, with a very non biased perspective. Everything is facts and no opinions are in this article. Most of the sources come from other wiki articles and they are very neutral sources. All the links are working and each fact doesn't seem to be close paraphrasing. All the information is up to date with even a section labeled "future expansion" which talks about Disneyland's plans for the future. In the talk page there is mostly modifications on links and other facts. The article is rated with 4 stars.

2. In N Out: [[2]] This article is very long in length with a lot of description to it. It talks about the history, legal issues, advertising, etc. Each fact has a reliable source with very accurate information. Everything in this article has to do with the topic, leaving nothing that distracts me from the article. The article is neutral, stating only facts and not really having any opinions. Most of the sources in this article stem from other wiki articles as well and are all very neutral. All the links seem to be working and each facts seems paraphrased very well and not too close to the original. All the information is up to date and does not seem like it is missing anything major. In the talk page, there is mostly links that can be modified and other information that can be added. The article is rated with 4 stars.

History

The site along Clear Creek where Pierson B. Reading discovered gold in 1848 was declared a California Historical Landmark.[1]

copied from [ [ clear lake Sacramento ] ]: Clear Lake was formed by a drainage being cut off and in result, the water found a way to flow from Cache Creek to the Sacramento River. Clear Lake is the largest natural lake in all of California. { { webarchive | url: http://www.parks.ca.gov/?page_id=473%7C accessed May 2, 2017.

  1. ^ "Clear Creek". Office of Historic Preservation, California State Parks. Retrieved 2012-10-14.