

Set the |answered= or |ans= parameter to no to reactivate your request. After 96 hours have elapsed from the time they made their account they can edit the page. All they have to do is create an account, then make 10 edits over the course of 4 days. Where did he tell you he no longer have access to the internet? Your students still can edit the article. FallingGravity ( talk) 19:48, 18 April 2013 (UTC) Actually the person who applied the protection to Platypus, User:HJ Mitchell, edited two days ago. If your students hangs around here for a few days and reaches WP:Autoconfirmed status, then s/he should be able to edit this page. "Semi-protection" only stops people without an account and some new users from editing that page, as a way to combat vandalism. contribs) 19:12, 18 April 2013 (UTC) The page actually has been edited since 2010, if you'd look at the page history ( here are the changes).

Preceding unsigned comment added by Bobbrodman ( talk I can understand if this was a Platypus expert using peer-review to make sure that the page is accurate, but this case seems to defeat the mission of wikipedia. My student wants to make edits and cite recent literature to keep the page up to date but cannot.
PLATYPUS PENIS PIC UPDATE
No one has been able to update the page since 2010. Preceding unsigned comment added by 71.205.198.123 ( talk) 01:14, 30 November 2012 (UTC)Ĭurrently the person who has put a block on editing the Platypus page is an expert in Military History who says that he no longer has access to the internet. This may seem like a trivial source as It may take it's info from here but also seems to have the same predators listed. I can't imagine the adults are vulnerable to smaller predators. I think we are interested in what the evidence is, and whether the predation is upon the young or upon the adults. The statement is obscure as to whether a) it means these predators are actually known to predate platypus, or b) are round and about and might predate platypus. Old_Wombat ( talk) 09:09, 23 December 2011 (UTC) Yes, I think this is fair comment. This is a sentence with no citations, and I dispute it. It seems to me highly unlikely that a water rat, a Goshawk or an owl, even our largest, the Powerful Owl, would be large enough able to predate on a platypus. Following on from the previous sentence, presumeably this paragraph is talking about adult platypus.
