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authorFabian Tamp <fabian.tamp@gmail.com>2020-01-27 04:53:42 +0300
committerFabian Tamp <fabian.tamp@gmail.com>2020-01-27 04:53:42 +0300
commitb764f91ba15105928478793c081944f25d7debcd (patch)
treee591f19f88b5a9759f616628efe21f4f05a004d4
parente238f70c1897e8ac2ed05791c8f9b7a6817a90ca (diff)
Add example site
-rw-r--r--exampleSite/archetypes/default.md6
-rw-r--r--exampleSite/config.toml38
-rw-r--r--exampleSite/content/about/index.md10
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diff --git a/exampleSite/archetypes/default.md b/exampleSite/archetypes/default.md
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+---
+title: "{{ replace .Name "-" " " | title }}"
+date: {{ .Date }}
+draft: true
+---
+
diff --git a/exampleSite/config.toml b/exampleSite/config.toml
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+baseURL = "http://example.org/"
+languageCode = "en-us"
+title = "Example Site for capnfabs-hugo-lite"
+theme = "capnfabs-lite"
+copyright = "© 2011-2020 Fabian Tamp"
+
+pygmentsUseClasses = true
+
+[outputs]
+page = ["HTML", "droplist"]
+
+[params]
+# Turn this on if you want to disable margin notes everywhere!
+# disableMarginNotes = true
+
+[[params.menu]]
+ name = "Recent Posts"
+ url = "posts/"
+
+[[params.menu]]
+ name = "Posts by Tag"
+ url = "tags/"
+
+[[params.menu]]
+ name = "About the contents of this example site"
+ url = "about/"
+
+[[params.menu]]
+ name = "Link to theme on Github"
+ url = "https://github.com/capnfabs/hugo-theme-lite"
+
+[[params.topmenu]]
+ name = "my favourite bird"
+ url = "posts/kookaburra"
+
+[[params.topmenu]]
+ name = "rss"
+ url = "posts/index.xml"
diff --git a/exampleSite/content/about/index.md b/exampleSite/content/about/index.md
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+---
+date: 2020-01-05
+title: "About the contents of this example site"
+---
+
+All content on this example site is taken from [_The Birds of Australia_, volume 2 of 7, by John Gould](http://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/60302).
+
+That book's available in full on Project ~~Gutenbird~~ Gutenberg. The illustrations are beautiful.
+
+Note that many of the names of the birds have since changed, and there's [efforts underway in parts of Australia](https://www.dpaw.wa.gov.au/images/documents/about/science/cswa/articles/14.pdf) to start identifying these birds by the names used by local Aboriginal Australians.
diff --git a/exampleSite/content/posts/kookaburra/featured.jpg b/exampleSite/content/posts/kookaburra/featured.jpg
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diff --git a/exampleSite/content/posts/kookaburra/index.md b/exampleSite/content/posts/kookaburra/index.md
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+---
+date: 2020-01-03
+title: "Great Brown Kingfisher"
+tags:
+- New South Wales
+- Large birds
+---
+
+{{< figure
+ src="featured.jpg"
+ caption="The Great Brown Kingfisher"
+ attr="-- Project Gutenberg"
+ attrlink="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/60302/60302-h/60302-h.htm"
+>}}
+
+The _Dacelo gigantea_ is a bird with which every resident and traveller in New South Wales is more or less familiar, for independently of its large size, which in itself would tend to attract attention, its voice is so extraordinary as to be unlike that of any other living creature. In its disposition it is by no means shy, and when any new objects are presented to its notice, such as a party traversing the bush or pitching their tent in the vicinity of its retreat, it becomes very prying and inquisitive, often perching on the dead branch of some neighbouring tree, and watching with the greatest curiosity the kindling of the fire and the preparation of the meal; its presence, however, owing to the quietude with which it passes through the forest, and the almost noiseless manner in which it settles, is seldom detected until it emits its extraordinary gurgling, laughing note, which generally calls forth some exclamation according with the temper of the hearer, such as “There is our old friend the Laughing Jackass,” or an epithet of a less friendly character: not unfrequently does its life pay the penalty of its temerity; for if, as is often the case, the traveller’s larder be ill-provided and his appetite keen, but a few minutes elapse before it is roasting over the fire it was lately surveying with so much curiosity. So remarkable are the sounds emitted by the bird that they have been noted by nearly every writer on New South Wales and its productions. Mr. Caley states that its “loud noise, somewhat like laughing, may be heard at a considerable distance, from which circumstance, and its uncouth appearance, it probably received the extraordinary appellation given to it by the settlers on their first arrival in the colony.” Captain Sturt says, “Its cry, which resembles a chorus of wild spirits, is apt to startle the traveller who may be in jeopardy, as if laughing and mocking at his misfortune;” and Mr. Bennett, in his ‘Wanderings,’ says, “Its peculiar gurgling laugh, commencing in a low and gradually rising to a high and loud tone, is often heard in all parts of the colony; the deafening noise being poured forth while the bird remains perched upon a neighbouring tree; it rises with the dawn, when the woods re-echo with its gurgling laugh; at sunset it is again heard; and as that glorious orb sinks in the west, a last ‘good night’ is given in its peculiar tones to all within hearing.”
+
+The Great Brown Kingfisher does not inhabit Van Diemen’s Land, nor has it yet been met with in Western Australia; it may be said to be almost solely confined to that portion of Australia lying between Spencer’s Gulf and Moreton Bay, the south-eastern corner, as it were, of the continent.[^location] Unlike most other species, it frequents every variety of situation; the luxuriant brushes stretching along the coast, the more thinly-timbered forest, the belts of trees studding the parched plains and the brushes of the higher ranges being alike favoured with its presence; over all these localities it is rather thinly dispersed being nowhere very numerous.
+
+[^location]: The plate in the Pl. Enl., quoted above, has been considered by all previous writers to have reference to this bird, and while I coincide in this opinion, I think that some mistake must have arisen as to the locality, and that it never visits New Guinea nor even the northern coast of Australia, where its place is supplied by the Dacelo cervina and D. Leachii.
+
+I believe that this bird seldom, if ever, drinks; consequently the most arid plains are as suitable to its habits as the shrouded river sides and the flat brushes near the coast.
+
+Its food, which is of a mixed character, consists exclusively of animal substances; reptiles, insects and crabs, however, appear to be its favourite diet, upon which it is destined by nature to subsist: it devours lizards with avidity, and it is not an unfrequent sight to see it bearing off a snake in its bill to be eaten at leisure; it also preys on small mammalia.[^the-rat] It breeds during the months of August and September, and generally selects a hole in a large gum-tree for the purpose; making no nest, but depositing its beautiful pearl-white eggs, which are one inch and nine lines long by one inch and five lines broad, on the decomposed wood at the bottom of the hole. When there are young ones in it, it defends its breeding-place with great courage and daring, darting down upon any intruder who may attempt to ascend the tree, and inflicting severe and dangerous blows with its pointed bill.
+
+[^the-rat]: I recollect shooting a Great Brown Kingfisher in South Australia in order to secure a fine rat I saw hanging from its bill, and which proved to be a rare species inhabiting the plains of that part of the country.
+
+The sexes present so little difference in the colouring of their plumage, that they are scarcely distinguishable from each other; neither do the young at a month old exhibit any great variation from the adult, the only difference being that the markings are somewhat darker and the brown more generally diffused.
+
+It bears confinement remarkably well, and is one of the most amusing birds for the aviary with which I am acquainted: examples have been brought alive to England; one lived for several years in the Gardens of the Zoological Society of London, and at the moment I am writing (April 1843) a fine individual brought from New South Wales by Mr. Yaldwyn, is now living at his seat at Blackdown in Sussex, where it attracts the attention of every one by its singular actions and extraordinary notes, which are poured forth as freely as in its native wilds.
+
+Forehead brown, each feather with a stripe of blackish brown down the centre; crown of the head, lores, ear-coverts, and a broad band passing round the occiput blackish brown; space between the crown of the head and the band encircling the occiput, and the back of the neck buff, crossed by fine irregular lines of dark brown; back and wings brownish black; the wing-coverts and rump tipped with verditer green; primaries white at the base, black for the remainder of their length, and stained with green on their outer margins immediately behind the white; upper tail-coverts blackish brown, crossed by several broad irregular bands of rusty red; tail brownish black, tipped with white, the white increasing in extent as the feathers recede from the centre; the central feathers crossed near the tip with rusty red; the lateral feathers with brownish black, the bands being very narrow near the tip, and gradually increasing in breadth as they approach the base, where the white interspaces also become tinged with rusty red; under surface pale buffy white, crossed by fine irregular freckled markings of dark brown; upper mandible brownish black; under mandible pale buff; feet olive; irides dark brown; eyelash olive-brown.
+
+The figures represent a male and two young of the natural size.
diff --git a/exampleSite/content/posts/leaches-kingfisher/featured-i078.jpg b/exampleSite/content/posts/leaches-kingfisher/featured-i078.jpg
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+---
+date: 2020-01-07
+title: "Leach's Kingfisher"
+tags:
+- New South Wales
+- South Australia
+- Small birds
+---
+
+{{< figure
+ src="featured-i078.jpg"
+ class="smaller"
+ caption="Leach's Kingfisher"
+ attr="-- Project Gutenberg"
+ attrlink="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/60302/60302-h/60302-h.htm"
+>}}
+
+Specimens of this fine Kingsfisher are contained in the British Museum, the Linnean Society, and my own collections, all of which were procured on the north-east coast of Australia, where it evidently replaces the Dacelo gigantea of New South Wales and South Australia.
+
+The specimen in the Linnean Society’s museum was presented by Dr. Brown, who procured it in Keppel Bay on the east coast; and it was subsequently seen at Shoalwater Bay and Broad Sound on the same coast; my own specimens were obtained at Cape York, the north-eastern extremity of Australia.
+
+The habits, actions, food, and indeed the whole of the economy, are so precisely like those of the Dacelo gigantea that a separate description of them is entirely unnecessary.
+
+The male has the head and back of the neck striated with brown and white; sides of the neck and under surface white, crossed with very narrow irregular markings of brown, these markings becoming much broader and conspicuous on the under surface of the shoulder; back brownish black; wing-coverts and rump shining azure-blue; wings deep blue; primaries white at the base, black on their inner webs and blue on the outer; tail rich deep blue, all but the two centre feathers irregularly barred near the extremity and largely tipped with white; upper mandible brownish black, under mandible pale buff; irides dark brown; feet olive.
+
+The female differs but little from the male in the colouring of the plumage, except that the tail-feathers, instead of being of a rich blue barred and tipped with white, are of a light chestnut-brown conspicuously barred with bluish black.
+
+The Plate represents the two sexes about the natural size.
diff --git a/exampleSite/content/posts/magpie/featured-i170.jpg b/exampleSite/content/posts/magpie/featured-i170.jpg
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+---
+date: 2020-01-20
+title: "Pied Crow Shrike"
+tags:
+- New South Wales
+- Large Birds
+draft: true
+disableMarginNotes: true
+---
+
+_Editor's note_: This page is marked as a draft, which is why everything is orange and stripey.
+
+{{< figure
+ src="featured-i170.jpg"
+ caption="The Pied Crow-Shrike"
+ attr="-- Project Gutenberg"
+ attrlink="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/60302/60302-h/60302-h.htm"
+>}}
+
+This species was originally described and figured in White’s ‘Voyage to New South Wales’: it is consequently the oldest and most familiarly known member of the group to which it belongs. It is very generally distributed over the colony of New South Wales, inhabiting alike the brushes near the coast, those of the mountain ranges, and also the forests of Eucalypti which clothe the plains and more open country. As a great part of its food consists of seeds, berries and fruits, it is more arboreal in its habits than some of the other species of its group, whose structure better adapts them for progression on the ground, and whose food principally consists of insects and their larvæ. The habitat of the present bird appears to be confined to the south-eastern portions of the continent, where, as is the case with all birds whose range is so limited, it is a stationary species, merely moving from one district to another according to the season; at one time being more numerous on the open coast, and at another among the brushes, as each may offer it a greater variety or more abundant supply of food: the hilly portions of the country intersected with deep ravines are, however, decidedly its most congenial localities. Like the other members of the genus it is mostly seen in small companies, varying from four to six in number, seldom either singly or in pairs: I am not, however, inclined to consider them as gregarious birds in the strict sense of the word, believing as I do that each of these small companies is composed of a pair and their progeny, which appear to keep together from the birth of the latter until the natural impulse for pairing prompts them to separate.[^unimportant]
+
+[^unimportant]: Here's a footnote I added for no good reason, except to demonstrate that you can turn off margin notes on a per-article basis.
+
+Their flight is very different from that of the Crow, (which they much resemble in outward appearance) being much less protracted, and never of an elevated character; its utmost extent is from one part of the forest to another, or across a gully, in effecting which they sometimes pass over the tops of the trees, while at others they accomplish the distance by flitting from tree to tree. It is during flight that the markings of this bird are displayed to the greatest advantage, the strong contrast of its colours then rendering it a conspicuous object in the bush: while on the wing also it frequently causes the woods to ring with its peculiar noisy cry, by which its presence is often indicated when otherwise it would not be seen. On the ground it hops over the surface with the greatest facility.
+
+The nest, which is usually constructed on the branches of low trees, sometimes even on those of the Casuarinæ, is of a large size, round, open, and cup-shaped, built of sticks and lined with moss and grasses; the eggs, which I was not so fortunate as to procure, are generally three or four in number.
+
+The flesh of this species is frequently eaten by the colonists, and is by some considered a delicacy.
+
+Of all the species of this singular and well-defined genus, the present, although not the largest in stature, is by far the handsomest, its markings being more clearly defined and the tints of its plumage more rich and contrasted than those of any of its congeners, the black being as deep as jet, and the white pure and unspotted; it differs also from all its allies yet discovered in having the basal half of the primaries and the basal half and the tips of the tail-feathers together with those portions of the shafts pure white.
+
+The plumage of both sexes at all ages is so precisely similar, that by dissection alone can we distinguish the male from his mate, or the young from the adult; the female is, however, always a trifle less in all her admeasurements, and the young birds have the corners of the mouth more fleshy and of a brighter yellow than the adults.
+
+All the plumage fine bluish black with the exception of the basal half of the primaries, the basal half and the tips of the tail-feathers, including those portions of their shafts and the under tail-coverts which are snow-white; irides beautiful yellow; bill and feet black.
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+---
+date: 2020-01-26
+title: "Wood Swallow"
+tags:
+- New South Wales
+- Small birds
+---
+
+{{< figure
+ src="i110.jpg"
+ caption="The Wood Swallow"
+ attr="-- Project Gutenberg"
+ attrlink="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/60302/60302-h/60302-h.htm"
+>}}
+
+This Wood Swallow has been long known to ornithologists[^1], but unfortunately under so many generic and specific appellations, that it may be cited as an instance of the manner in which our science has been burthened with useless names, thereby producing an inextricable confusion[^2], and which in this instance, by a reference to Latham’s accurate description, and the slightest care on the part of other writers, might have been avoided.
+
+[^1]: This is an _intentional_ stress test of the margin-notes system. When we add lots of margin notes in nearby paragraphs with lots of content, they automatically flow down the page.
+[^2]: If you are worried about having too much margin text, you can always set `disableMarginNotes` on the page, and you'll get regular footnotes at the bottom of the page.
+
+No other species of the Australian Artami[^3] with which I am acquainted possesses so wide a range from east to west as the present; the whole of the southern portion of the continent, as well as the island of Van Diemen’s Land, being alike favoured with its presence. The extent of its range northward has not yet been satisfactorily ascertained, beyond the certainty that it has not hitherto been received in any collection from the north coast.
+
+[^3]: Here's another footnote, just to make sure it works :)
+
+It may be regarded as strictly migratory in Van Diemen’s Land, where it arrives in October, the beginning of the Australian summer, and after rearing at least two broods departs again northwards in November. On the continent a scattered few remain throughout the year in all the localities favourable to its habits, the number being regulated by the supply of insect food necessary for their subsistence. I may here observe, that specimens from Swan River, South Australia and New South Wales present no difference either in size or colouring, while those from Van Diemen’s Land are invariably larger in all their admeasurements, and are also of a deeper colour; I regard them, however, as mere varieties of each other, the greater size of the latter being doubtless caused by the superabundance of food which this more southern and humid climate affords.
+
+This Wood Swallow[^4], besides being the commonest species of the genus, must I think be rendered a general favourite with the Australians, not only from its singular and pleasing actions, but by its often taking up its abode and incubating near the houses, particularly such as are surrounded by paddocks and open pasture-lands skirted by large trees. It was in such situations as these in Van Diemen’s Land, at the commencement of spring, that I first had an opportunity of observing this species; it was then very numerous on all the cleared estates on the north side of the Derwent, about eight or ten being seen on a single tree, and half as many crowding one against another on the same dead branch, but never in such numbers as to deserve the appellation of flocks: each bird appeared to act independently of the other; each, as the desire for food prompted it, sallying forth from the branch to capture a passing insect, or to soar round the tree and return again to the same spot; on alighting it repeatedly throws up and closes one wing at a time, and spreads the tail obliquely prior to settling. At other times a few were seen perched on the fence surrounding the paddock, on which they frequently descended, like Starlings, in search of coleoptera and other insects. It is not, however, in this state of comparative quiescence that this graceful bird is seen to the greatest advantage, neither is it that kind of existence for which its form is especially adapted; for although its structure is more equally suited for terrestrial, arboreal and aërial habits than that of any other species I have examined, the form of its wing at once points out the air as its peculiar province: hence it is, that when engaged in pursuit of the insects which the serene and warm weather has enticed from their lurking-places among the foliage to sport in higher regions, this beautiful species in these aërial flights displays its greatest beauty, while soaring above, in a variety of easy positions, with white-tipped tail widely spread. Another very extraordinary and singular habit of the bird is that of clustering like bees on the dead branch of a tree, as represented in the Plate; this feature was not seen by me, but by my assistant Mr. Gilbert, during his residence at Swan River, and I have here given his account in his own words. “The greatest peculiarity in the habits of this bird is its manner of suspending itself in perfect clusters, like a swarm of bees; a few birds suspending themselves on the under side of a dead branch, while others of the flock attach themselves one to the other, in such numbers that they have been observed nearly of the size of a bushel measure.”
+
+[^4]: I think the margin notes really shine when you see them spaced out down the page like this. They're super useful for technical writing, but note that they align to the top of the paragraph they're referenced from; so they work best if you use short paragraphs.
+
+It was very numerous in the town of Perth until about the middle of April, when I missed it suddenly, nor did I observe it again until near the end of May, when I saw it in countless numbers flying in company with the Common Swallows and Martens over a lake about ten miles north of the town; so numerous, in fact, were they, that they darkened the water as they flew over it.
+
+Its voice greatly resembles that of the Common Swallow in character, but is much more harsh.
+
+The stomach is muscular and capacious, and the food consists of insects generally.
+
+The season of incubation is from September to December. The situation of the nest is much varied; I have seen one placed in a thickly foliaged bough near the ground, while others were in a naked fork, on the side of the hole of a tree, in a niche formed by a portion of the bark having been separated from the trunk, &c. The nest is rather shallow, of a rounded form, about five inches in diameter, and composed of fine twigs neatly lined with fibrous roots. I observed that the nests found in Van Diemen’s Land were larger, more compact and more neatly formed than those on the continent of Australia; and one which was shown me by Mr. Justice Montague on his picturesque estate at Kangaroo Point, near Hobart Town, was placed at the extremity of a small leafy branch, as represented in the Plate.
+
+The eggs are generally four in number; they differ much in the disposition of their markings; their ground-colour is dull white, spotted and dashed with dark umber-brown; in some a second series of greyish spots appear as if beneath the surface of the shell; their medium length is eleven lines, and breadth eight lines.
+
+Head, neck, and the whole of the body fuliginous grey; wings dark bluish black, the external edges of the second, third and fourth primaries white; tail bluish black, all the feathers except the two middle ones largely tipped with white; irides dark brown; bill blue with a black tip; feet mealy lead-colour.
+
+The sexes are alike in the colouring of their plumage, and are only to be distinguished by the female being somewhat smaller in size.
+
+The young have an irregular stripe of dirty white down the centre of each feather of the upper surface, and are mottled with the same on the under surface.
+
+The Plate represents a male and female of the natural size.
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