From f96a274bfa474fa2e8a1fa522cfe0dea41d7b1c1 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Stephen Gadd <42514781+docuracy@users.noreply.github.com> Date: Wed, 14 Feb 2024 23:02:32 +0000 Subject: [PATCH] Update .zenodo.json --- .zenodo.json | 2 +- 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-) diff --git a/.zenodo.json b/.zenodo.json index 46b8985..5dc3d0c 100644 --- a/.zenodo.json +++ b/.zenodo.json @@ -71,5 +71,5 @@ ], "license": "CC-BY-4.0", "upload_type": "dataset", - "description": "
INDEX VILLARIS: or, An Alphabetical Table of all the cities, market-towns, parishes, villages, and private seats in England and Wales was first published by John Adams in 1680. This dataset consists of a transcription of all 24,000 place-names listed in Index Villaris, together with the the symbols representing Adams's categorisation of each place and modern versions of the place-names and the counties and administrative hundred in which they lie or lay. It also comprises a transcription of the latitude and longitude recorded by Adams, and another set of coordinates generated by the application of a thin plate spline transformation calculated by matching some 2,000 place-names to the accurately-georeferenced CAMPOP Towns dataset.
\n\nThe dataset is being checked, corrected, and refined to include linkage to other geospatial references such as OpenStreetMap and Wikidata, and will in due course be made available in the Linked Places Format.
" + "description": "INDEX VILLARIS: or, An Alphabetical Table of all the cities, market-towns, parishes, villages, and private seats in England and Wales was first published by John Adams in 1680. This dataset consists of a transcription of all 24,000 place-names listed in Index Villaris, together with the the symbols representing Adams's categorisation of each place and modern versions of the place-names and the counties and administrative hundred in which they lie or lay. It also comprises a transcription of the latitude and longitude recorded by Adams, and another set of coordinates generated by the application of a thin plate spline transformation calculated by matching some 2,000 place-names to the accurately-georeferenced CAMPOP Towns dataset.
\n\nThe dataset has been corrected and refined to include linkage to other geospatial references such as GB1900 and OpenStreetMap, and this version is available as GeoJSON in the Linked Places Format.
\n\nThe dataset can be viewed both on an interactive map and in reconstituted tabular form through the GitHub repository here.
" }