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That's what is says...OK?
Now, someone who put this together must have worked out that 250 days is more than 7.8 months but less than 0.8 years.
So why didn't the mathematical person who worked out that 250 days was less than this and more than that, actually make the stuff match? This list reads like the stuff of idiots who write for newspapers and say that while 43% do, less than half don't and maybe 2 in a hundred might while 0.05 have really no idea at all.
Fix it, someone! It's a violation of common sense! 1.4258 years! 648 blinking days!
Can I suggest that someone makes the dayish ones into days, up to 365, then you go yearsish. What Grandma reeeally wants to know is, if calculations are made to the 4th decimal point, what happens in Leap Years? -- Amandajm 10:09, 3 June 2007 (UTC)
Agreed! 0.13th of a day? Who the hell measures days in 100ths?????? Wouldn't three hours be more unidiotic???? "Gotta run to the store. Be back in 0.085th of a day" said no friggin one ever! Typical case of some Wiki author who has been educated way beyond the capacity of his intelligence. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 107.12.162.211 ( talk) 01:10, 13 June 2016 (UTC)
Somebody should cite these numbers properly in accordance with WP:CITE. I would, but looking over the external links it wasn't clear to me which "article about the lake" the original poster was referring to. -- Jhamon 10:06, 1 October 2007 (UTC)
I believe the values for Lake Tahoe and Lake Baikal are in error, there is no way that the retention time for Lake Tahoe can be more than that for Lake Baikal. I would hope that someone familiar with the data for both lakes would make the corrections-- Pkrnger 20:05, 11 November 2007 (UTC)
From the discussion here, it seems that User:Docu] is automatically generating the list of lake retention times, presumably by using a bot. First question: am I understanding that right?
If so, then there's not much point in my editing the list directly, but perhaps I could make a suggestion. This long list of retention times doesn't really suit what should be an encyclopedic article on the concept of lake retention time. Could it perhaps be moved to a new page called (for example) List of lake retention times and hopefully formatted similarly to List of lakes by volume and List of lakes by depth. There remain issues about providing some geographical context (continent, country or countries), and finding a good way to sort values ranging from <1day to >1,000 years.
Then, in this main article, the very long table could be replaced by a much shorter one of particularly notable lakes. I'm thinking that it would include some with very short or very long documented retention times, plus retention times for some of the world's best known lakes. Rupert Clayton ( talk) 17:46, 11 December 2007 (UTC)
I think the retention time listed for this lake is a typo. I my opinion, it's probably 13 days, but I could be wrong; I am only a A-level geology stundent... (you probably know what the UK's education system is like :-|)
-- Chelokwong ( talk) 15:20, 9 May 2009 (UTC)
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Lake Eucumbene is a dam for hydro-power generation, whose construction begun in 1956. I am not sure how these years are related but the water certainly won't stay in there for more than three years, most likely much less. In 2022 the lake level rose from 40 to 70% within less than five months. https://www.snowyhydro.com.au/generation/live-data/lake-levels/
Can we delete this lake from the list? 2003:A:24:3600:C1F:5C0:AC6A:7F39 ( talk) 10:24, 25 March 2023 (UTC)