Claudette_Erosion.JPG (640 × 480 pixels, file size: 55 KB, MIME type: image/jpeg)
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From http://www.srh.noaa.gov/hgx/projects/claudette03/images/p1010041.jpg archive copy at the Wayback Machine, this image shows structual damaged caused by Hurricane Claudette in July of 2003.
This media file has been nominated for deletion since 4 October 2024. To discuss it, please visit the nomination page.
Do not remove this tag until the deletion nomination is closed. Reason for the nomination:
All four of these files are sourced to a National Weather Service website (Galveston regional office). Such sites host a mixture of content created by the US federal government (public domain) and content created by businesses and private individuals (a wide variety of free and unfree licenses). We rely on the captions they were published with to tell us where photos originated. In particular, storm damage photos such as these often come from County Emergency Management Agencies, County Sheriffs, other state- or county-level agencies, and even from private citizens. Even more particularly, aerial damage photos are very often (even usually) not the work of the NWS but of those other agencies or the Civil Air Patrol. Unfortunately, all these images are no longer hosted on the NWS website where they originated, and the citation we have for each of them points directly to the image itself instead of the page it was found on. Therefore, although we can verify that the file exists in the Internet Archive, we no longer have access to its copyright and licensing information. Because such photos routinely originate outside the NWS, I reached out the to NWS office that published them to ask about their origin. They told me that they do not know who took these:
I have forwarded this advice to the VRT (ticket:2024100410012611) Because we cannot verify that any of these images are (or were ever) ever available under a free license, we must delete as a precaution unless the precise creator and evidence of permission can be found. If they are truly orphan images, they will enter the public domain 120 years after they were taken: 2122 for the Tropical Storm Allison photo; 2124 for the Hurricane Claudette images.
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{{subst:delete2|image=Photos from NWS Galveston with unverifiable creator|reason=* File:TS Allison Texas flooding.jpg
All four of these files are sourced to a National Weather Service website (Galveston regional office). Such sites host a mixture of content created by the US federal government (public domain) and content created by businesses and private individuals (a wide variety of free and unfree licenses). We rely on the captions they were published with to tell us where photos originated. In particular, storm damage photos such as these often come from County Emergency Management Agencies, County Sheriffs, other state- or county-level agencies, and even from private citizens. Even more particularly, aerial damage photos are very often (even usually) not the work of the NWS but of those other agencies or the Civil Air Patrol. Unfortunately, all these images are no longer hosted on the NWS website where they originated, and the citation we have for each of them points directly to the image itself instead of the page it was found on. Therefore, although we can verify that the file exists in the Internet Archive, we no longer have access to its copyright and licensing information. Because such photos routinely originate outside the NWS, I reached out the to NWS office that published them to ask about their origin. They told me that they do not know who took these:
I have forwarded this advice to the VRT (ticket:2024100410012611) Because we cannot verify that any of these images are (or were ever) ever available under a free license, we must delete as a precaution unless the precise creator and evidence of permission can be found. If they are truly orphan images, they will enter the public domain 120 years after they were taken: 2122 for the Tropical Storm Allison photo; 2124 for the Hurricane Claudette images.
For mass deletions: If you want to nominate several related images, please make a mass request by manually adding Note: This template is for requests that may require discussion in order to be deleted. For speedy deletions, you can use
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Caution: License review in progress As of November 2024, the copyright and licensing status of this file is under review. A Commons contributor has asserted in good faith that this file is in the public domain either because:
If, during review, this file is found to be in the public domain or available under a free license, a new rationale will be applied as part of the review process and this notice will no longer be displayed. Files that cannot be established with reasonable certainty to be in the public domain or available under a free license will be deleted. To uploaders
Before re-using this file In particular, if the file was created by a third party, verify that the specific terms and conditions under which its creator submitted it to the NWS included an explicit release of the file into the public domain. Read such terms and conditions carefully; at least one of these (Omaha) contains one option which would place the file into the public domain and another option which would not. If you cannot verify the terms and conditions that applied to the submission, or these terms and conditions did not contain an explicit release into the public domain, contact the creator of the file and ask their permission to re-use it. If you are unable to verify that this file is in the public domain or available under a free license, please consider nominating this file for deletion. See below for the original rationale for asserting that this file is in the Public Domain.
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Items portrayed in this file
depicts
image/jpeg
2bc5afdc4538df8fe1c3db4bfd3efe940e0f5a7b
56,352 byte
480 pixel
640 pixel
File history
Click on a date/time to view the file as it appeared at that time.
Date/Time | Thumbnail | Dimensions | User | Comment | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
current | 17:53, 18 March 2006 | 640 × 480 (55 KB) | Hurricanehink | From http://www.srh.noaa.gov/hgx/projects/claudette03/images/p1010041.jpg, this image shows structual damaged caused by Hurricane Claudette in July of 2003. Claudette == Licensing == {{PD-USGov}} |
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Metadata
This file contains additional information, probably added from the digital camera or scanner used to create or digitize it.
If the file has been modified from its original state, some details may not fully reflect the modified file.
Image title | OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA |
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Camera manufacturer | OLYMPUS OPTICAL CO.,LTD |
Camera model | C960Z,D460Z |
Exposure time | 1/193 sec (0.0051813471502591) |
F-number | f/12.2 |
ISO speed rating | 125 |
Date and time of data generation | Unknown date |
Lens focal length | 13.6 mm |
Orientation | Normal |
Horizontal resolution | 72 dpi |
Vertical resolution | 72 dpi |
Software used | v874u-74 |
File change date and time | Unknown date |
Y and C positioning | Co-sited |
Exposure Program | Normal program |
Exif version | 2.1 |
Date and time of digitizing | Unknown date |
Image compression mode | 1 |
Exposure bias | 0 |
Maximum land aperture | 3 APEX (f/2.83) |
Metering mode | Pattern |
Light source | Unknown |
Flash | Flash did not fire |
Color space | sRGB |