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Gardiners_Island Gardiners_Bay Gardner_Island Nikumaroro

"San Diegan Bares Clue to Earhart Fate", by Lew Scarr, San Diego Tribune, July 21, 1960: "Gardner Island is a five-mile hyphen of coral punctuating a million square miles of nowhere and nothing in the Central Pacific. If a San Diego man is right, it is where Amelia Earhart crashed and died 23 years ago. The water slapping the short, sharp Gardner shoreline is as warm as your bath and as blue as your baby's eyes…" Hopiakuta 01:19, 12 September 2006 (UTC) reply

No, Gardner Pinnacles is different. Gardner island, or Nikumaroro, is what that article is talking about. SeanMD80 talk | contribs 12:26, 12 September 2006 (UTC) reply

Assessment comment

The comment(s) below were originally left at Talk:Gardner Pinnacles/Comments, and are posted here for posterity. Following several discussions in past years, these subpages are now deprecated. The comments may be irrelevant or outdated; if so, please feel free to remove this section.

Needs to be broken up into sections. One section with info on geography/geology, one section for history (though by nature not as prolific as some of the other NWHI), on for ecology. SeanMD80 talk | contribs 02:42, 23 March 2008 (UTC) reply

Last edited at 02:42, 23 March 2008 (UTC). Substituted at 15:48, 29 April 2016 (UTC)

emphasis and Wikipedia Manual of Style

Hello, There is no need for bold typeface - research papers and other short works instead take double quotation marks as per Wikipedia style rules - Wikipedia:Manual_of_Style#Emphasis. -- AbouMPSI ( talk) 17:28, 28 May 2020 (UTC) reply