Beyond my pay grade, but they always go over refs with a fine-toothed
nit comb. Fossilworks may or may not pass muster; LiveScience will likely get a kicking; The Conversation will probably be challenged; IMDb will be judged an unreliable source, I'll wager; even BBC News might be found a bit light for this kind of topic.
"the raptorials" is comprehensible but comes across as a little bit chatty. Perhaps "the raptorial whales" would be more encyclopedic in tone (whatever that is).
"The first Livyatan fossils discovered in Peru were originally dated to around 13-12 million years ago (mya) in the Serravallian Age of the Miocene, but this dating was later proven to be incorrect and revised to 9.9-8.9 mya " is perhaps overegging the blow by blow account. Could simplify to something like "The first Livyatan fossils from Peru were dated to around 13-12 million years ago (mya) in the Serravallian Age of the Miocene, but this was revised to 9.9-8.9 mya ".
"The large size was probably an anti-predator adaptation, and also to allow it to feed on larger prey." might be better as "The large size was probably an anti-predator adaptation, and allowed it to feed on larger prey."
Some measurements are "cm" and some "centimetres", but all the imperial measurements are "in". Why not use "cm" for all the metric ones.
done
"To a lesser degree, eagle rays, sawfish, and angelsharks were other cartilaginous fish found." isn't clear. Perhaps "Eagle rays, sawfish, and angelsharks were among the other cartilaginous fish found."
Mmm. Sorry but I simply can't see the relevance of the rather trivial-sounding plot details: whether the whale was whoever's pet, and stuff about pirates has no bearing on the article. All that is required (if the section is indeed helpful at all) is a brief mention that the species featured in the movie.
You asked also about notes for FA: the reviewers there would very likely jump on this section, either asking for other cultural mentions or objecting to trivia. But who knows.
The Megalodon image should be labelled as a painting and attributed to Karen Carr.
Dunkleosteus77: This article is well up to the required standard for GA, and with a bit of polishing should have a good chance at FAC. While there is no official quid pro quo here at GA, I'd like to take the opportunity to encourage you to review one or two articles in the
Biology and medicine GAN queue in the spirit of collegiality. Meanwhile, congratulations on another excellent article.
Chiswick Chap (
talk)
19:22, 10 December 2017 (UTC)reply