Archivist Page Review

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Document: 14 A Study of Northwestern Apples

Source page: Open page 15 in document reader

Institution: Open PRAIRIE | Publisher: | Year: | Pages: 144

Source URL: https://openprairie.sdstate.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1075&context=agexperimentsta_bulletins

Selected Versions

Left: archivist-1.6.68-spark (fragment 5678)

Right: archivist-1.0 (fragment 3339)

Next Step

Reprocess/promote controls are the next UI layer. The data foundation is now versioned and diffable.

Page Version Diff

Cultivars Added
  • Peffer
Claims Added
  • Alexander | anecdote_snippet | In the West, Wolf River had largely superseded Alexander.
  • Alexander | entry_pedigree | Alexander is presented as the parent of Wolf River.
  • Concord | description_snippet | Concord grape is cited as showing a strong tendency to reproduce itself from seed.
  • Peffer | selection_origin_reference | Peffer is identified as one of the apples originated by Geo. P. Peffer.
  • Pewaukee | selection_origin_reference | Pewaukee is identified as one of the apples originated by Geo. P. Peffer.
  • Wealthy | anecdote_snippet | Remarks at a Minnesota State Horticultural Society meeting referenced the son of the originator distributing sprouts from the original tree to help settle the matter.
  • Wealthy | anecdote_snippet | The Wealthy apple was said to have apparently varied somewhat under propagation.
  • Wealthy | description_snippet | Numerous seedlings of Wealthy had recently appeared in the Northwest and closely resembled the variety.
  • Wolf River | entry_pedigree | Wolf River is considered to be a seedling of Alexander.
  • Wolf River | recommendation_context | It had largely superseded its parent in the West because of demonstrated superiority.
  • Wolf | anecdote_snippet | The text states it was not known whether this difference represented bud variation or a seedling mixture.
  • Wolf | description_snippet | Two Wolf plums were recognized in northwestern nurseries: a freestone and a cling form.
Figures Added
  • none
Citations Added
  • Minnesota State Horticultural Society meeting
Cultivars Removed
  • Cling
  • Free Stone
Claims Removed
  • Alexander | anecdote_snippet | Later text implies relative decline versus Wolf River in western growing conditions.
  • Alexander | entry_pedigree | Named as a presumed parent of Wolf River.
  • Cling | description_snippet | One of the two named Wolf plum forms noted in nurseries.
  • Cling | selection_origin_reference | Origin mechanism (bud variation versus seedling mix) remains unresolved in-page.
  • Concord | anecdote_snippet | Cited as a non-apple comparative example for apparent tendency to reproduce from seed.
  • Free Stone | description_snippet | Identified as one of two recognized Wolf plum forms.
  • Free Stone | selection_origin_reference | Its status is discussed as potentially bud variation or seedling-derived.
  • Pewaukee | anecdote_snippet | Connected to a broader historical argument about apples reproducing varietal traits from seed under covered blossoms.
  • Pewaukee | breeder_reference | Credited to the late Geo. P. Peffer as an originator.
  • Pewaukee | selection_origin_reference | Used as an example in discussion of Apple seed reproduction claims.
  • Wealthy | anecdote_snippet | Remarks on this variability were discussed at Minnesota State Horticultural Society; original grower distributed sprouts from an original tree.
  • Wealthy | description_snippet | Observed to produce many seedlings resembling the variety.
  • Wealthy | selection_origin_reference | Observed by peers as having varied somewhat under propagation.
  • Wolf River | anecdote_snippet | The text frames Wolf River as an observed replacement of its parent in practice.
  • Wolf River | entry_pedigree | Described as a seedling of Alexander.
  • Wolf River | selection_origin_reference | Reported as having largely superseded Alexander in western regions due to superior points.
  • Wolf | description_snippet | Two forms (free stone and cling) are recognized in nurseries.
  • Wolf | entry_hardiness_observation | Origin mechanism is unresolved as bud variation versus seedling mix in this source.
Figures Removed
  • none
Citations Removed
  • Hansen, N.E. (1902). A Study of Northwestern Apples. South Dakota State Agricultural Experiment Station Bulletin 76.
  • Remarks at the Minnesota State Horticultural Society meeting.

Available Page Versions

IDVariantStatusModelSpecializationCountsSourceCompare
1595archivist-1.6.68-sparkactivegpt-5.3-codex-sparkvisual_page_generalist8 cultivars / 18 claims / 0 figuresOpen source page
515archivist-1.0baseline_promotedgpt-5.4visual_page_generalist7 cultivars / 12 claims / 0 figuresOpen source pageCompare to active