Talk:Summit-level canal

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Must define the concept[edit]

The article completely fails to define what makes a canal a summit-level canal. All it says is that it connects two rivers. But then the first example that satisfies that description is disqualified because it is too flat. The obvious conclusion is that the definition is, at the least, incomplete.

Furthermore, the article uses "summit level" as if it is such a common-place term that it needs no explanation. "The summit level was a flat cut" and "a 13-kilometer summit level". In fact, this term, if it exists at all, is so uncommon that it isn't even listed in the unabridged Webster's I have at hand. (Webster's does list "summit-level canal", also "summit canal", but that is not defined as "canal with a summit level".) I rather suspect that the term "summit level" as used here simply does not exist.

Also, a general lack of references. 2602:306:CEAE:E60:14A3:C20C:2943:F32A (talk) 07:21, 10 June 2016 (UTC)[reply]

I think I have addressed the problem of the lede being muddy and not explanatory. Wiki-inking to summit pound also helps. I have not fixed the paucity of references problem. -- M.boli (talk) 18:49, 27 October 2021 (UTC) (Five years after the initial note.)[reply]

Not major[edit]

Canal de l'Oise à l'Aisne is not a major canal, but added it anyway. GloverEpp (talk) 13:24, 10 August 2010 (UTC)[reply]