Jump to content

Wikipedia:Main Page alternatives/(simple layout)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
'Welcome' to Wikipedia, the free-content encyclopedia that anyone can edit.


Almanac · Categories · Glossaries · Lists · Overviews · Portals · Questions · Site news · Index

Art | Geography | History | Mathematics | People | Philosophy | Science | Society | Technology

We are building an open-content encyclopedia in many languages. We started in January 2001 and are now working on 6,987,434 articles in the English version. Learn how to edit pages, experiment in the sandbox, and visit our Community Portal to find out how you can contribute to Wikipedia. This page is also available without pictures. More main page alternatives

Today's featured article

Lemurs of Madagascar is a 2010 reference work and field guide on the lemurs of Madagascar, giving descriptions and biogeographic data for the known species. The primary contributor is Russell Mittermeier, president of Conservation International, and the cover art and illustrations are by Stephen D. Nash. Currently in its third edition, the book provides details about all known lemur species, general information about lemurs and their history, and tips for identifying species. Four related pocket field guides have also been released, containing color illustrations of each species, miniature range maps, and species checklists. The first edition was reviewed favorably. The first edition identified 50 lemur species and subspecies, increased to 71 in the second edition and 101 in the third. The taxonomy promoted by these books has been questioned by researchers, such as Ian Tattersall, who view these growing numbers of lemur species as insufficiently justified inflation of species numbers. (Full article...)

Recently featured:

Did you know...

Spaceship House
Spaceship House

In the news

Port of Shahid Rajaee fire
Port of Shahid Rajaee

On this day

April 28: Workers' Memorial Day

Mounted police maintaining order at the 1923 FA Cup final
Mounted police maintaining order at the 1923 FA Cup final
More anniversaries:
Red-chested cuckoo

The red-chested cuckoo (Cuculus solitarius) is a species of cuckoo. It is a medium-sized bird, about 31 cm (12.2 in) in length, found in Sub-Saharan Africa. The male has slate-grey upper parts, pale grey throat and sides of head and dark grey tail tipped with white. The breast is rufous or cinnamon, often with barring, and the belly is creamy-white or pale buff. The female is similar but the colour of the breast is duller and with variable amounts of barring. It is usually solitary and highly vocal and lives on forests and plantations. It eats insects including caterpillars, spiders, centipedes, millipedes, slugs, snails, small vertebrates and berries. This red-chested cuckoo was photographed in Kibale National Park, Kenya.

Photograph credit: Giles Laurent

Portals

Categories

Animation  – Celebrities  – Dance  – Entertainers  – Festivals – Games – Hobbies – Humour – Music – Parties – Radio – Television – Toys

Africa – Antarctica – Asia – Australia – Europe – North America – Oceania – South America
Cities – Climate – Countries – Landforms – Maps – Parks – Subterranea – Towns

Education – Family – Food and drink – Health – Home – People

Sister Projects

Wikipedia is run by the non-profit Wikimedia Foundation. Wikimedia operates several other multilingual and open-content wiki projects:

Meta-WikiCoordination of all Wikimedia projects
WiktionaryA multilingual dictionary and thesaurus
WikibooksFree textbooks and manuals
WikiquoteA collection of quotations
WikisourceFree source documents
WikinewsFree content news source


Wikipedia in other languages


If you find this encyclopedia or its sister projects useful, please consider making a donation.