Articles to be improved can be nominated by registered users in the "nominations" section below, with an explanation of what work is needed. Please do not nominate articles involved in edit wars. Each quarter, the article with the most support votes is chosen. Opposing votes are not counted, the nomination is an approval voting. In case of a tie, the candidate that was nominated first wins. You can vote for as many articles as you like. As with any other vote on Wikipedia, sockpuppets are banned.
Sign your user name with the directions in the template and add a comment for why the article should be nominated. Optionally, add a to-do list at the bottom
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III
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After submitting the new nomination, go to the nominated article and put:
{{PeruACIDnom}}{{todo|small=yes}}
on the top of the article's talk page. (skip {{todo}} if it's already present on the article's talk page)
The next project article is to be selected on October 5, 2007.
Please add new nominations at the bottom of this section. Ongoing collaborations should have {{ThisPeruCollab}} on their talkpages. Archived ones should have "|old-peer-review=yes" at the {{PeruProjectBanner}}.
It is a Top-importace article in Wikiproject Peru and also in Wikiproject South America. It lacks many references and sources, and has many sections to improve. Also it can be useful to improve it, because is one of the main topics about Peruvian Prehispanic history. (sorry for my bad english).
This is a stub-class article that has been rated as being of top importance to the Peru wikiproject. It also has has been marked as needing immediate attention and needing a photograph.
Subject that deserves more study. The Rubber boom transformed Iquitos from a town >10,000 into the biggest Peruvian city in the Amazon. The largest rubber exporter operating in Iquitos during the height of the rubber boom was Julio Cesar Arana, who established the Company in 1907. Arana was the mayor of Iquitos between 1902-1903. One of Arana's largest ally's, Luis F. Morey became the senator of Loreto in 1901. Morey's fleet of ships were instrumental in the success of the PAC. Besides the Putumayo, Arana also owned rubber extracting territories on the Hullaga river, a tributary of the Marañon. His business partners had rubber extracting enterprises on the Ucayali, the Marañon and their tributaries. Arana's brother in law Pablo Zumaeta later became the mayor of Iquitos in 1912, 1914, and between 1922-1923. The Company had a huge impact on the city of Iquito's, and the development of Peru's territory in the Amazon. This goes without saying the Company had tremendous, and horrible impacts on the local indigenous populations as well as their culture. Years after the liquidation, Miguel S. Loayza, who worked for the PAC and Arana since its inception, forcefully migrated 6,719 Natives deeper into Peru before the Putumayo border changed. Some of these Natives still live in Peru today. I can provided further information however I am requesting some collaboration on this page.
This is one of the top-importance articles of this Wikiproject. It is currently in a sorry state. It lacks a "History" section and there are almost no references. Even so there are plenty of sources and pics available to improve it to FA status. With a little effort we can make it people.
Comment seems like the most reasonable collaboration suggestion. There isn't a single article on a Latin American capital that is above a B-class. If we could get this article above a B-class that in itself would be unique and there is a lot of room for improvement in the article.--Jersey Devil00:51, 1 July 2007 (UTC)Reply