02:0302:03, 26 November 2025diffhist−1,733James Deanremove books and other works listed in the "Further reading" section that are cited in the article text; one of them, added with this edit, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?diff=701827039, looked dubious, so I've removed it toocurrent
05:0405:04, 24 November 2025diffhist−568Mosquito Coastgiven source says from Boca Toro to Point A'Castillo; text that contradicts a given source should not be inserted in front of reference to that source, an insertion which obviously misrepresents that source; if editor has a reliable source that supports the text, cite it; remove unnecessary ref markup that clutters the editing page
03:1103:11, 24 November 2025diffhist−2,282St. Augustine, Floridaremove text added in good faith by student that speaks in first person wikivoice, repeats generic information already present in the history section of this article in more detailed and better-written form; and cites a personal blog as a source for historical informationTag:Undo
03:0103:01, 24 November 2025diffhist+645St. Augustine, Floridacorrect info and replace tourist guide reference with an academic source by historians, much better than captions written for illustrations on a website for tourists; fix ref format
19:5219:52, 23 November 2025diffhist−720mRepublic of East Floridaadded text is in conflict with what Mirow actually says; he says on p. 114: "The East Florida records do not seem to reveal the level of " local particularism" and use of derecho vulgar observed by Cutter in other similar North American Spanish colonial contexts . St. Augustine's officials were quite compliant with the requirements of the decrees of the Cortes and the provisions of the Constitution." Charles Cutter defines "derecho vulgar" as "local modifications of Hispanic law" | clean up
15:5915:59, 22 November 2025diffhist−47Orsanmichelerestore dates with ordinal numbers used in article before apparent single-purpose account started editing it; in reference to SPA's edit summaries such as "someone's citations", "someone's Latin", and "someone's earlier sentence": every edit to this article was made by "someone", including the "someone" using the SPA accountcurrent
05:0805:08, 18 November 2025diffhist+194Mexican cuisinerestore collage of Mexican cuisine which is much more generally representative of the cuisine than a large dish of mole sauce; move photo of mole sauce to appropriate section that discusses molecurrent
02:2002:20, 18 November 2025diffhist−374mSurf cultureFails verification, the Rolling Stone article given as a source for this info doesn't mention "surf nazi" or the word "nazi" | Cleaned up usingAutoEd
22:5822:58, 16 November 2025diffhist+34Tartessosce: "sherds" is correct spelling and it is more precise in meaning than "shards"; Merriam Webster defines sherd as "a fragment of a pottery vessel found on sites and in refuse deposits where pottery-making peoples have lived.";replace weasel wording with inline attribution in addition to given source, fix ref markup
20:0820:08, 16 November 2025diffhist−3Sutton Hoopartial revert of previous good-faith edit: this article, as noted at the top of the editing page, is written in British English, which is not as heavily punctuated as American English, especially with commas. Also, "Despite opposition by those who considered that funds available could be better used for rescue archaeology." is not a complete sentence—it lacks a verb.
18:1918:19, 16 November 2025diffhist+128Bernardo de GálvezInfo is not to be inserted in front of a source that does not support the added information; given source does not mention the added info, it says: "On November 2, 1777, she married Bernardo de Gálvez (q.v.), newly appointed governor of Louisiana. Three children: Matilda; Miguel ; and Guadalupe ." No source was provided for names "María de la Paz, and Mateo Bernardo José Guadalupe", also the editor removed daughter Guadalupe Felicitas and replaced with unsourced "Mateo Bernardo José Guadalupe"