Template:Did you know/Queue
If there are four or more empty queues, this page will report a backlog. ( ) |
To report errors in queues, please place a message at WT:DYK or WP:ERRORS. |
There are currently 4 filled queues. Admins, please consider promoting a prep to queue if you have the time!
When modifying a hook in a queue or prep area (other than minor formatting fixes), please notify the nominator by including a link of the form [[User:JoeEditor]]
in your edit summary. (Ping templates like {{u|JoeEditor}}
don't work in edit summaries.)
Administrators: Please ensure that there is always at least one queue filled at all times, to prevent overdue updates to the Main Page.
This page gives an overview of all DYK hooks currently scheduled for promotion to the Main Page. By showing the content of all queues and prep areas in one place, the overview helps administrators see how full the queues are, and also makes it easier for users to check that their hook has been promoted or to find hooks for copy-editing. Hooks removed from queues or prep areas for unresolved issues should have their nominations reopened and retranscluded at the nomination page.
You may need to purge this page to get it to display the latest edits.
The next update will be produced from Queue 4. After performing a manual update, please update the pointer to the next queue.
Current number of hooks on the nominations page
Note: See WP:DYKROTATE for when we change between one and two sets per day.
Count of DYK Hooks | ||
Section | # of Hooks | # Verified |
---|---|---|
September 23 | 1 | |
September 24 | 1 | |
September 26 | 1 | |
September 27 | 1 | 1 |
September 28 | 1 | |
October 3 | 1 | |
October 5 | 1 | |
October 6 | 1 | |
October 7 | 2 | |
October 8 | 1 | |
October 9 | 1 | |
October 12 | 1 | |
October 13 | 5 | 2 |
October 15 | 4 | 1 |
October 16 | 2 | |
October 17 | 1 | |
October 18 | 6 | 2 |
October 19 | 4 | 1 |
October 20 | 2 | |
October 22 | 5 | 1 |
October 23 | 4 | 1 |
October 24 | 3 | |
October 25 | 2 | 1 |
October 27 | 1 | |
October 28 | 3 | |
October 30 | 5 | 1 |
October 31 | 7 | 2 |
November 1 | 8 | 5 |
November 2 | 8 | 5 |
November 3 | 11 | 7 |
November 4 | 7 | 3 |
November 5 | 10 | 7 |
November 6 | 4 | 2 |
November 7 | 8 | 5 |
November 8 | 7 | 3 |
November 9 | 7 | 4 |
November 10 | 9 | 5 |
November 11 | 6 | 4 |
November 12 | 5 | 3 |
November 13 | 6 | 1 |
November 14 | 7 | 1 |
November 15 | 12 | 7 |
November 16 | 9 | 5 |
November 17 | 6 | 3 |
November 18 | 15 | 12 |
November 19 | 13 | 4 |
November 20 | 10 | 8 |
November 21 | 13 | 6 |
November 22 | 10 | 4 |
November 23 | 4 | 3 |
November 24 | 4 | |
November 25 | 5 | 2 |
November 26 | 1 | 1 |
November 27 | 2 | 2 |
November 28 | ||
November 29 | ||
Total | 274 | 125 |
Last updated 17:03, 29 November 2024 UTC Current time is 17:46, 29 November 2024 UTC [refresh] |
DYK time
DYK queue status
Current time: 17:46, 29 November 2024 (UTC) Update frequency: once every 24 hours Last updated: 17 hours ago() |
The next empty queue is 1. (update · from prep 1 · from prep 2 · clear) |
Local update times
Los Angeles | New York | UTC | London (UTC) | New Delhi | Tokyo | Sydney | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Queue 4 | 29 November 16:00 |
29 November 19:00 |
30 November 00:00 |
30 November 00:00 |
30 November 05:30 |
30 November 09:00 |
30 November 11:00 |
Queue 5 | 30 November 16:00 |
30 November 19:00 |
1 December 00:00 |
1 December 00:00 |
1 December 05:30 |
1 December 09:00 |
1 December 11:00 |
Queue 6 | 1 December 16:00 |
1 December 19:00 |
2 December 00:00 |
2 December 00:00 |
2 December 05:30 |
2 December 09:00 |
2 December 11:00 |
Queue 7 | 2 December 16:00 |
2 December 19:00 |
3 December 00:00 |
3 December 00:00 |
3 December 05:30 |
3 December 09:00 |
3 December 11:00 |
Queue 1 Prep 1 |
3 December 16:00 |
3 December 19:00 |
4 December 00:00 |
4 December 00:00 |
4 December 05:30 |
4 December 09:00 |
4 December 11:00 |
Queue 2 Prep 2 |
4 December 16:00 |
4 December 19:00 |
5 December 00:00 |
5 December 00:00 |
5 December 05:30 |
5 December 09:00 |
5 December 11:00 |
Queue 3 Prep 3 |
5 December 16:00 |
5 December 19:00 |
6 December 00:00 |
6 December 00:00 |
6 December 05:30 |
6 December 09:00 |
6 December 11:00 |
Prep 4 | 6 December 16:00 |
6 December 19:00 |
7 December 00:00 |
7 December 00:00 |
7 December 05:30 |
7 December 09:00 |
7 December 11:00 |
Prep 5 | 7 December 16:00 |
7 December 19:00 |
8 December 00:00 |
8 December 00:00 |
8 December 05:30 |
8 December 09:00 |
8 December 11:00 |
Prep 6 | 8 December 16:00 |
8 December 19:00 |
9 December 00:00 |
9 December 00:00 |
9 December 05:30 |
9 December 09:00 |
9 December 11:00 |
Prep 7 | 9 December 16:00 |
9 December 19:00 |
10 December 00:00 |
10 December 00:00 |
10 December 05:30 |
10 December 09:00 |
10 December 11:00 |
Queues
The hooks below have been approved by a human ( — Amakuru (talk)) and will be automatically added to the DYK template at the appropriate time. |
- ... that Salvadoran president Nayib Bukele (pictured) has referred to himself as the "coolest dictator in the world"?
- ... that following its deconsecration, the Church of Santa Maria Maggiore in Venice and its grounds have been used as a stable, a tobacco warehouse, and a prison?
- ... that television director Diana Edwards-Jones introduced earpieces to permit direct communication between a control room and newsreaders?
- ... that St Francis of Assisi Church, Notting Hill, contains a font designed by John Francis Bentley and in which he was later baptised?
- ... that the 1983 Spanish floods were the most economically damaging in Spain until the 2024 Spanish floods?
- ... that the medieval Castle Knob was the site of a Cold War nuclear monitoring station?
- ... that Zhou Houkun wrote a thesis on the use of bamboo to reinforce concrete?
- ... that Burrito Express began shipping out its burritos by mail because of demand from former customers who had moved away from California?
- ... that weightlifter Wu Tsai-fu drank six huge glasses of beer to help himself urinate for a drug test?
The hooks below have been approved by a human ( — Amakuru (talk)) and will be automatically added to the DYK template at the appropriate time. |
- ... that a canoe (pictured) designed by Carl Smith accompanied a circumnavigation of Earth in 1883–1885?
- ... that although nobody died in the 1984 Southland floods, about 12,000 sheep perished?
- ... that while conducting research for Kingdom of Characters, author Jing Tsu visited archives across multiple countries and continents?
- ... that Patriarch Amalric was, according to the archbishop of Tyre, "reasonably well educated but bereft of intelligence and virtually useless"?
- ... that according to The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction, the 1913 Polish novel The Cross and the Crescent is "perhaps the first example" of the genre of military science fiction in Polish literature?
- ... that the director for Yuzuru Hanyu's Echoes of Life Tour choreographed the 2016 Summer Olympics closing ceremony?
- ... that the MrBeast Lab toy line first debuted in a pop-up store in the shape of an overturned tanker truck carrying toxic waste?
- ... that Peel's Cut, a watercourse in Staffordshire, lasted more than 100 years longer than the mill it was excavated to power?
- ... that no actual voting took place in the 1939 Liechtenstein general election?
The hooks below have been approved by a human ( — Chris Woodrich (talk)) and will be automatically added to the DYK template at the appropriate time. |
- ... that more than one hundred million stars are visible in Zooming In on the Andromeda Galaxy (pictured)?
- ... that Karen Tei Yamashita realized the structure of her novel, I Hotel, by cutting, folding, and writing on ten cardboard cubes, each representing a year in the book?
- ... that Carrlyn Bathe met her husband after he sent her gear from his clothing brand?
- ... that due to the near-miss effect, gamblers may mistake a game of luck for a game of skill?
- ... that tacklers "bounced off" Chauncey Archiquette "as if he were a brick wall"?
- ... that the author of the comic book Timeless Voyage was the leader of a UFO religion?
- ... that Chief Constable James Smart flooded police courts with over 17,000 cases to prove how impractical it was for home owners to light their own stairs?
- ... that an Indiana university argued in court that The Silver Veil and the Golden Gate, a 1914 painting, was too modern for their art collection in 2024?
- ... that Piri Reis did not map Antarctica in the sixteenth century?
The hooks below have been approved by a human ( — Chris Woodrich (talk)) and will be automatically added to the DYK template at the appropriate time. |
- ... that water-filled pits (example pictured) left behind by tin mining activities in Indonesia have become tourist attractions?
- ... that a senior colonel with 30 years' experience in North Korean intelligence agencies defected to South Korea in 2014?
- ... that an underground tunnel between two houses in what is now Jugtown Historic District was used to hide fugitive slaves?
- ... that, when John of Montfort was captured in 1341 during the Breton Civil War, his wife took command of the Breton army?
- ... that Sehome was an incorporated town for only three years?
- ... that five of the six people killed in the 2011 Cullman–Arab tornado were members of the same family?
- ... that Ornithoprion was studied primarily using X-rays of its fossils?
- ... that the author of Oh My Mother! has written about the phenomenon of giving Asian-American girls the name "Connie"?
- ... that the Campo Valdés Roman baths were rediscovered during the construction of a sewer system in 1903?
REMOVE THIS MESSAGE WHEN ADDING HOOKS TO THE QUEUE This queue is currently empty. When hooks are added, they must be approved by adding {{DYKbotdo|~~~}} to the top of the page; the bot will not make any updates unless this is added. Remove this message when adding the hooks. |
REMOVE THIS MESSAGE WHEN ADDING HOOKS TO THE QUEUE This queue is currently empty. When hooks are added, they must be approved by adding {{DYKbotdo|~~~}} to the top of the page; the bot will not make any updates unless this is added. Remove this message when adding the hooks. |
REMOVE THIS MESSAGE WHEN ADDING HOOKS TO THE QUEUE This queue is currently empty. When hooks are added, they must be approved by adding {{DYKbotdo|~~~}} to the top of the page; the bot will not make any updates unless this is added. Remove this message when adding the hooks. |
Instructions on how to promote a hook
At-a-glance instructions on how to promote an approved hook to a prep area
|
---|
For more information, please see T:TDYK#How to promote an accepted hook. |
Handy copy sources:
To [[T:DYK/P1|Prep 1]]
To [[T:DYK/P2|Prep 2]]
To [[T:DYK/P3|Prep 3]]
To [[T:DYK/P4|Prep 4]]
To [[T:DYK/P5|Prep 5]]
To [[T:DYK/P6|Prep 6]]
To [[T:DYK/P7|Prep 7]]
Prep areas
Note: The next prep set to move into the queue is Prep 1 [update count].
- ... that Marie Denizard (pictured) stood as a candidate in a French presidential election in 1913, thirty years before French women achieved suffrage?
- ... that The Crystal was one of few publications in early-20th-century China that regularly covered same-sex intimacy?
- ... that Hanif Kureshi transformed shadows cast by the Sun into street art?
- ... that Gigarta, a settlement mentioned by Strabo and Pliny the Elder, is believed to have been located on the slopes of Mount Lebanon, although its exact location remains under debate?
- ... that Al LeBoeuf was diagnosed with a rare condition in 2012 from an injury that he suffered in 1985?
- ... that the Swedish broadcaster organising the Eurovision Song Contest 1975 refused to allow the contest to be shown in Chile, as a protest against the country's military dictatorship?
- ... that the Polish manga and anime fandom arose in the 1990s and now numbers over 100,000 people?
- ... that Frank A. Kimball brought a transcontinental rail terminus to National City, California, in exchange for thousands of acres of land?
- ... that Aldous Huxley developed his "feelies" in response to the emergence of "talkies"?
- ... that dogs (examples pictured) were domesticated from wolves over 14,000 years ago by hunter-gatherers, before the development of agriculture?
- ... that in 1809, two ministers leading the British war effort against Napoleon fought a duel against each other?
- ... that in his first year in the NFL, Lou Rash was told he was released and began flying back home, but was told upon landing that the release was a mistake and he was to return?
- ... that muthkwey was not harvested or walked over, because oral tradition held that it had grown from the droppings of a two-headed serpent?
- ... that the Mongol princess Al-Altan was rumoured to have poisoned her brother Ögedei Khan?
- ... that out of 148 candidates in the 1957 Manipur Territorial Council election there was only one woman?
- ... that the Saybrook Colony was sold to Connecticut for an annual payment of 180 pounds, one-third wheat, one-third peas, and one-third rye or barley?
- ... that future Olympic weightlifter Chiu Yuh-chuan received a job offer in marketing after media coverage about his difficulty securing employment?
- ... that basketball coach Trisha Stafford-Odom left the Eagles to join the Eagles?
- ... that Kang Ju-hyeok (pictured) became the youngest player in FC Seoul's history at the age of 17 years, 9 months, and 6 days?
- ... that the 2017 Vocaloid song "Dune", written by Kenshi Yonezu for Hatsune Miku's 10th anniversary, features lyrics about the end of life?
- ... that Richard Du Cann acted for the defence in the Lady Chatterley's Lover obscenity trial and the trial of John Stonehouse MP?
- ... that the funds from the sale of burial lots at Cathedral Cemetery in Philadelphia were used for the construction of the Cathedral Basilica of Saints Peter and Paul?
- ... that Mary Robertson was the first woman to receive a Doctor of Science in Medicine from the University of Cape Town?
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- ... that due to difficulty in pronouncing his name, one Canadian football announcer refused to mention Tony Pajaczkowski in game broadcasts for several years?
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- ... that residents of Port Mercer, New Jersey, profited from passerby by dragging their mules into the Delaware and Raritan Canal and having local boys "rescue" them for a fee?
- ... that a man stabbed the painting Regulus (pictured) because he disliked the "misty state of the picture"?
- ... that at 103 years old, Annie Huggett was the oldest surviving suffragette at the time of her 1996 death?
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- ... that the oldest surviving wooden lightship, dating to 1840, is now an Airbnb?
- ... that comic opera performer Celie Ellis Turner pursued a stage career against the wishes of her family?
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- ... that the 14th century Barquq Castle (pictured) was damaged during the Israel–Hamas war?
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- ... that Chen Qiyou, a would-be assassin, later became part of the Chinese Committee for World Peace?
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- ... that the God of Amiens (head pictured) seems to have lost his serpent?
- ... that Aucklanders have a reputation for making false earthquake reports on New Zealand's earthquake monitoring website GeoNet?
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