The Caucasus: an actual example of the initial stages of continental collision

Multilingual Wikipedia

In June 2020 the work The Caucasus: an actual example of the initial stages of continental collision was on the 3,192nd place in the ranking of the most reliable and popular publications with DOI number in multilingual Wikipedia from readers' point of view (PR-score). If we consider only frequency of appearance of this source in references of Wikipedia articles (F-score), this work was on the 57,979th place in June 2020. From Wikipedians' point of view, "The Caucasus: an actual example of the initial stages of continental collision" is the 2,813th most reliable publication with DOI number in different language versions of Wikipedia (AR-score).

PR-score:
3,192nd place
280,279
-45,139
AR-score:
2,813th place
19,978
+275
F-score:
57,979th place
11
+1

English Wikipedia (en)

PR-score:
2,344th place
240,506
-13,732
AR-score:
3,008th place
13,030
+25
F-score:
91,166th place
4
0

Greek Wikipedia (el)

PR-score:
110th place
13,466
-10,600
AR-score:
486th place
600
0
F-score:
8,131st place
1
0

Italian Wikipedia (it)

PR-score:
2,006th place
12,600
-12,700
AR-score:
1,313th place
2,000
+100
F-score:
39,988th place
1
0

Arabic Wikipedia (ar)

PR-score:
2,515th place
5,366
-1,934
AR-score:
1,356th place
1,366
0
F-score:
30,044th place
1
0

Norwegian Wikipedia (no)

PR-score:
198th place
4,040
-2,640
AR-score:
220th place
1,540
0
F-score:
2,483rd place
1
0

Slovenian Wikipedia (sl)

PR-score:
151st place
3,500
-3,933
AR-score:
116th place
1,166
0
F-score:
1,877th place
1
0

Bengali Wikipedia (bn)

PR-score:
190th place
450
+450
AR-score:
271st place
150
+150
F-score:
1,108th place
1
+1

Malayalam Wikipedia (ml)

PR-score:
430th place
350
-50
AR-score:
953rd place
125
0
F-score:
3,311th place
1
0

BestRef shows popularity and reliability scores for sources in references of Wikipedia articles in different languages. Data extraction based on complex method using Wikimedia dumps. To find the most popular and reliable sources we used information about over 200 million references of Wikipedia articles. More details...