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This article on 'Prehistoric Medicine' has been published because I felt Wikipedia was lacking an article on it. Please feel welcome to add things to this article and to contest information currently provided, but please drop a comment here before deleting or making major edits, just to be polite! Hope everyone enjoys the article. —Preceding unsigned comment added by MasterOfHisOwnDomain ( talk • contribs) 09:11, 31 December 2007
It has been almost one month since the original article on Prehistoric medicine was published, back on Dec 31st 2007 and since has been the subject of many revisions and additions. The article is now almost double the size of the original and I feel a lot better thanks to help from other editors and new sources I have discovered.
But there is still a lot of work to do, I feel. Help to improve the article and make it more than just a 'stub' is always appreciated! I think the article has a lot of potential for improvement and could become a very good article in a number of portals, having been included in 3 already.
Thanks for everyone's work so far! MasterOfHisOwnDomain ( talk) 16:48, 26 January 2008 (UTC)
tiscali.co.uk and thehistorychannel.co.uk are both referencing the same Hutchinson Encyclopedia of World History article. This article doesn't cite its sources, and is rather vague about which historic peoples it is referring to. Citing other encyclopedias like this isn't a good practice; Wikipedia needs more specific sources.
The article attributes many beliefs and practices to prehistoric people in general, but some social arrangements varied from culture to culture. When discussing specifics, the article should be specific about which cultures are applicable, and what evidence there is to justify the conclusion (referencing sources). -- Beland ( talk) 20:38, 3 May 2008 (UTC)
The topic has reached a milestone in that it is now 20,000+ bytes in length. I have absolutely no idea what bytes are, but it seems a suitably satisfying number, considering the efforts made by everyone who has contributed to the article! The article should soon be receiving a review by the History of Science, and might hopefully be upgraded to a B-status article! However I believe there is a lot more work and potential left in the article, not least on behalf of any spell-checkers/grammar-(checkers?).
Thanks everyone so far for any contributions! MasterOfHisOwnDomain ( talk) 19:16, 29 May 2008 (UTC)
Regarding this claim:
This continues to use the thehistorychannel.co.uk reference, which I do not find to be reliable. This sounds to me like it could be speculation on the part of someone writing a "popular history" article. For this claim to be trustworthy, it should have a reference to some scholarly evidence, which answers the questions, "which prehistoric people are we talking about, exactly?" and "how do we know that?" -- This may require some heavy lifting, such as contacting the author of the referenced article and asking for sources, or actually visiting a library and reading some books on the subject. -- Beland ( talk) 21:27, 10 June 2008 (UTC)
-- Beland ( talk) 21:56, 10 June 2008 (UTC)
-- Beland ( talk) 05:28, 11 June 2008 (UTC)
I've tagged everything above that hasn't been fixed in the article. -- Beland ( talk) 19:15, 11 December 2011 (UTC)
I've downgraded the article to "Start" class from "B" because "B" class articles apparently need to be free of inaccuracies, and I've pointed out a number of potential or actual inaccuracies above. -- Beland ( talk) 05:37, 11 June 2008 (UTC)
"There are many theories as to why it was carried out", is wrong, the word to use is hypothesis(its plural form, not singular form as noted).
"Scientific laws are similar to scientific theories in that they are principles that can be used to predict the behavior of the natural world. Both scientific laws and scientific theories are typically well-supported by observations and/or experimental evidence. Usually scientific laws refer to rules for how nature will behave under certain conditions.[9] Scientific theories are more overarching explanations of how nature works and why it exhibits certain characteristics." from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theory#Scientific_laws Subsection entitled Scientific Laws. 2008-12-24 T00:45 Z-8 76.171.208.143 ( talk) 08:45, 24 December 2008 (UTC)
Hello,
I have reassessed this article per the WikiProject History of Science quality scale. In my opinion the current C-class rating is still correct. The article contains a number of "citation needed" tags which disqualifies it from B class in all WikiProjects. It also contains a non-trivial amount of original research, and over-broad generalizations about shamans and particular beliefs in the supernatural. I also notice that some of the sources used to back up quite significant material are dubious - e.g. healthguidance.org which appears to be a content farm, and not a reliable source.
Cheers,
Thparkth ( talk) 01:08, 13 October 2011 (UTC)
I am trying to figure out how the current estimates for life expectancy have been produced, in light of certain claims that life expectancy is not a good measure, as it is biased by high infant mortality rates; further claims exist that those who did make it past a certain point might have had a long life. Do you think this is sufficient to challenge reference #6, "SHP: Medicine & Health Through Time"? If it's true, then this article would be participating in painting a false picture of prehistory. Viridium ( talk) 02:01, 8 August 2012 (UTC)
(sigh) Well, an entire day and some 70 edits later, I've completed a full review of all 37 references in this article. All of them have been converted into Help:Citation Style 1 cites. Dead links have been investigated, and all but one of them restored. Cryptic references to books were tracked down. ISBN's added. Publishers of websites identified. I think you may find the results interesting.
The first finding was that the most cryptic or incomplete references were almost invariably to low grade material. Children's books, high school websites, web news articles, and the like. The most complete references were most likely to be high quality books and journals. What this has taught me is that when looking at incomplete references, a red flag should go up immediately. It's likely to be a low quality reference. They may have snuck in years ago, and have gone unnoticed, because no one took the time to figure out what that cryptic reference is pointing to.
I've added up the types of refs and came up with: 10 Books, 4 of which are chidren's books or high school textbooks, 1 is from 1922, and 5 are reasonably current adult books. There are 4 peer-reviewed journal articles, 2 from news websites, 19 general websites (15 of which are low quality sources), and 2 are references back to Wikipedia, itself. There was even a "reference" to a fan site for a popular SciFi comedy, which I simply deleted entirely, and is not included in the 37.
As for the references to Wikipedia, let me call your attention to WP:CIRCULAR which explains why Wikipedia cannot be used as a reference.
I don't want to belabor the point, but I did find the results disappointing. But now that this work has been done, and and all the refs are working to the point where you can identify the sources and evaluate them for yourself, this would be a good time to take advantage of that, sort the wheat from the chafe, and to replace the more questionable references with better sources. I'm sure that the process will turn up new and interesting information that will greatly improve this article. And the result will be something to be proud of. Looking forward to seeing that happen.
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