Boulder, Colorado: Difference between revisions
Bot: A article creation |
Structural cleanup: ref-tag (automated) |
||
| (2 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown) | |||
| Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
# Boulder, Colorado | # Boulder, Colorado | ||
Boulder is a city in [[Colorado]] | Boulder is a city in [[Colorado]] situated at the base of the [[Rocky Mountains|Rocky Mountain]] foothills, approximately 25 miles northwest of Denver, and serves as the county seat of [[Boulder County]]. Founded in 1859 by a party of gold prospectors who recognized the site's potential as a supply point for mountain mining camps, the city has grown into one of the most distinctive mid-sized cities in the American West.<ref>{{cite web |title=Boulder |url=https://coloradoencyclopedia.org/article/boulder |work=Colorado Encyclopedia |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> The [[University of Colorado Boulder]], established in 1876, anchors the city's institutional life and enrolls more than 35,000 students, giving Boulder a pronounced college-town character that shapes its economy, demographics, and daily rhythm.<ref>{{cite web |title=Enrollment Summary |url=https://www.colorado.edu/oda/enrollment/enrollment-summary |work=University of Colorado Boulder Office of Data Analytics |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> The city holds more than 45,000 acres of protected open space managed by its Open Space and Mountain Parks department, a figure that reflects more than five decades of municipal land acquisition funded largely through a dedicated sales tax.<ref>{{cite web |title=Open Space and Mountain Parks |url=https://bouldercolorado.gov/departments/open-space-mountain-parks |work=City of Boulder |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> | ||
According to the U.S. Census Bureau, Boulder's population was approximately 105,112 as of the 2020 census, a figure that rises considerably when the university's student population is included in seasonal counts.<ref>{{cite web |title=Boulder city, Colorado |url=https://www.census.gov/quickfacts/bouldercitycolorado |work=U.S. Census Bureau |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> The city's median household income and educational attainment rates rank among the highest of any American city of comparable size, a pattern closely tied to the concentration of university faculty, research professionals, and technology workers in the local workforce.<ref>{{cite web |title=Boulder city, Colorado |url=https://www.census.gov/quickfacts/bouldercitycolorado |work=U.S. Census Bureau |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> Boulder gets about 300 days of measurable sunshine per year. That's a climatic feature often mentioned when describing the city, and it's directly responsible for the outdoor recreation culture that defines Boulder life.<ref>{{cite web |title=36 Hours in Boulder, Colo. |url=https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2016/08/18/travel/what-to-do-36-hours-boulder-colorado.html |work=The New York Times |date=2016-08-18 |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> | |||
== History == | == History == | ||
Boulder's history | Boulder's recorded history among European Americans begins in the autumn of 1858, when a party of prospectors from Nebraska led by Thomas Aikins camped at the mouth of Boulder Canyon while searching for gold in the Front Range foothills. They returned the following February, staked a townsite, and established the Boulder City Town Company in February 1859.<ref>{{cite web |title=Boulder |url=https://coloradoencyclopedia.org/article/boulder |work=Colorado Encyclopedia |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> The settlement grew quickly as a supply hub for miners working the mountain canyons to the west. By 1861, when Colorado Territory was formally organized, Boulder had already developed a commercial district and a small but stable residential population. | ||
The territorial legislature selected Boulder as the home of the Colorado Territory's first university in 1861, though the [[University of Colorado Boulder]] didn't open its doors until September 1877, a year after Colorado achieved statehood. The founding class consisted of just 44 students and one building. Old Main still stands on campus. Early decades brought financial hardship and uncertain enrollment for the young institution.<ref>{{cite web |title=History of the University of Colorado |url=https://www.colorado.edu/about/history |work=University of Colorado Boulder |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> Through the twentieth century, though, the university's growth transformed Boulder from a modest agricultural and mining service town into a city whose identity was defined largely by its relationship to higher education and research. | |||
Among the notable developments in Boulder's early institutional history was the construction of health and wellness facilities that drew visitors from across the region. A sanitarium was built on [[Mapleton Hill]] in 1896, replacing an earlier facility that had reached capacity.<ref>{{cite web |title=Boulder Colorado Sanitarium History |url=https://www.visitboulder.com/plan-your-trip/visitor-information/history/ |work=Visit Boulder Colorado |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> The Boulder Colorado Sanitarium represented an expansion of the city's role as a destination for health-seeking travelers. This function preceded by decades the outdoor recreation identity Boulder would later develop. The sanitarium era reflected a broader national trend in which western cities at altitude marketed their climates as remedies for respiratory and nervous conditions. | |||
== | Boulder's modern character was shaped significantly by policy decisions made in the 1950s and 1960s. In 1959, the city adopted the "Blue Line," a municipal ordinance that prohibited the extension of city water service above a specific elevation contour on the foothills to the west, effectively capping residential development on the mountain slopes.<ref>{{cite web |title=Boulder |url=https://coloradoencyclopedia.org/article/boulder |work=Colorado Encyclopedia |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> The following decade brought the establishment of the open space program. Boulder voters approved a dedicated sales tax for open land acquisition in 1967, making the city one of the first in the United States to fund green space preservation through a self-imposed local tax.<ref>{{cite web |title=Open Space and Mountain Parks History |url=https://bouldercolorado.gov/departments/open-space-mountain-parks/about-osmp/history |work=City of Boulder |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> These decisions set the physical parameters within which the city would grow for the remainder of the twentieth century and into the twenty-first. | ||
The [[City of Boulder]] administers an historic context program that collects and organizes information about related historic sites and events according to theme and geography.<ref>{{cite web |title=Historic Preservation |url=https://bouldercolorado.gov/historic-preservation |work=City of Boulder |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> The program designates individual landmarks and historic districts, provides guidance for property owners undertaking renovations, and maintains documentary records that form the basis for preservation decisions. Mapleton Hill, site of the 1896 sanitarium, falls within the scope of the city's preservation activities and contains one of Boulder's most intact concentrations of Victorian-era residential architecture.<ref>{{cite web |title=Historic Preservation |url=https://bouldercolorado.gov/historic-preservation |work=City of Boulder |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> | |||
== Geography and Natural Environment == | |||
Boulder | Boulder sits at an elevation of 5,430 feet (1,655 meters) at the point where the Great Plains meet the Rocky Mountain foothills. The [[Flatirons]], a series of steeply tilted sandstone slabs, rise directly above the western edge of the city and make this geological boundary immediately visible. The Flatirons are composed of Fountain Formation sedimentary rock deposited roughly 300 million years ago and subsequently upended by tectonic forces. Their near-vertical west faces reach heights above 7,000 feet and are visible from much of the Boulder Valley.<ref>{{cite web |title=Flatirons |url=https://coloradoencyclopedia.org/article/flatirons |work=Colorado Encyclopedia |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> They form the visual backdrop for the city. Among the most photographed geological features in Colorado. | ||
The | Boulder Creek runs east-west through the center of the city, draining mountain snowmelt and storm runoff from the high terrain above Boulder Canyon. The creek corridor is managed as a linear open space and recreational trail connecting the mountains to the plains. In September 2013, a slow-moving storm system dropped roughly 9 to 15 inches of rain across the Front Range watershed over four days. Boulder Creek overflowed its banks. The damage statewide reached an estimated $4 billion, with substantial destruction in Boulder and surrounding communities.<ref>{{cite web |title=Colorado Floods of 2013 |url=https://coloradoencyclopedia.org/article/colorado-floods-2013 |work=Colorado Encyclopedia |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> | ||
== | The city has accumulated more than 45,000 acres of protected open space, managed by the city's Open Space and Mountain Parks department.<ref>{{cite web |title=Open Space and Mountain Parks |url=https://bouldercolorado.gov/departments/open-space-mountain-parks |work=City of Boulder |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> This network encompasses mountain parks, creek corridors, agricultural preserves, and grassland areas that provide wildlife habitat, recreational access, and a physical boundary preventing the kind of sprawling suburban development that has absorbed many comparable Front Range communities. The open space program is funded through a dedicated sales tax that Boulder voters have renewed and expanded multiple times since the program's founding in 1967. The scale of protected land relative to the city's population is exceptional among American cities, more than 400 acres per 1,000 residents. It's frequently cited as a defining feature of Boulder's identity. | ||
Natural hazards recur alongside the region's many amenities. Wildfires pose a serious and growing threat to the open spaces and residential areas adjacent to the foothills. In December 2021, the [[Marshall Fire]] burned through the communities of Superior and Louisville just southeast of Boulder, destroying more than 1,000 structures in a matter of hours and becoming the most destructive wildfire in Colorado's recorded history.<ref>{{cite web |title=Marshall Fire |url=https://coloradoencyclopedia.org/article/marshall-fire |work=Colorado Encyclopedia |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> Fires have continued to threaten areas closer to the city itself in subsequent years. The Goat Trail Fire ignited in the hills near Boulder before fire crews contained it and authorities lifted all evacuation warnings.<ref>{{cite web |title=Goat Trail Fire Contained; All Evacuation Warnings Lifted |url=https://bouldercolorado.gov/news/goat-trail-fire-contained-all-evacuation-warnings-lifted |work=City of Boulder |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> These events reflect the increasing pressure on the urban-wildland interface across the Colorado Front Range, where prolonged drought and warming temperatures have extended the fire season and raised the intensity of burns that occur. | |||
== Climate == | |||
== | Boulder's climate is semi-arid, marked by low humidity, abundant sunshine, and pronounced seasonal variation. The city averages approximately 300 days per year with measurable sunshine, a figure that reflects the dryness of the region and the rain-shadow effect created by the Rocky Mountains to the west.<ref>{{cite web |title=36 Hours in Boulder, Colo. |url=https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2016/08/18/travel/what-to-do-36-hours-boulder-colorado.html |work=The New York Times |date=2016-08-18 |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> Average high temperatures in July reach approximately 90°F (32°C), while January highs average near 45°F (7°C), though temperatures can drop sharply during cold fronts. Annual snowfall averages around 90 inches, with the heaviest snowfalls typically occurring in March and April rather than in the depths of winter. That's a pattern common to the Colorado Front Range.<ref>{{cite web |title=NOWData – NOAA Online Weather Data |url=https://www.ncdc.noaa.gov/cdo-web/ |work=National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> | ||
Boulder's | One of Boulder's distinctive meteorological features is the Chinook wind, locally called the "Boulder wind" or simply a downslope wind. These events periodically push warm, dry air down the eastern slopes of the Rockies and into the city. Temperatures can rise by 30°F or more within hours, while relative humidity drops to single digits. That creates extreme fire weather conditions. The same Chinook conditions that produced unseasonably warm temperatures on December 30, 2021, contributed directly to the rapid spread of the Marshall Fire later that day.<ref>{{cite web |title=Marshall Fire |url=https://coloradoencyclopedia.org/article/marshall-fire |work=Colorado Encyclopedia |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> | ||
== Demographics == | |||
== | According to the 2020 U.S. Census, Boulder had a population of 105,112.<ref>{{cite web |title=Boulder city, Colorado |url=https://www.census.gov/quickfacts/bouldercitycolorado |work=U.S. Census Bureau |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> The city's population is notably homogeneous by national standards. Approximately 85 percent of residents identified as white alone in the 2020 census, with Hispanic or Latino residents comprising roughly 8 percent, Asian residents approximately 5 percent, and Black or African American residents approximately 1 percent.<ref>{{cite web |title=Boulder city, Colorado |url=https://www.census.gov/quickfacts/bouldercitycolorado |work=U.S. Census Bureau |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> The city's racial composition has been a subject of ongoing discussion among residents and city officials, with Boulder acknowledging that housing costs and historical patterns of land use have contributed to barriers for lower-income and minority populations. | ||
Boulder | Educational attainment in Boulder is exceptionally high. More than 75 percent of Boulder residents aged 25 and older hold a bachelor's degree or higher. That compares to a national average of roughly 33 percent. The disparity reflects both the presence of the university and the concentration of knowledge-sector workers in the local economy.<ref>{{cite web |title=Boulder city, Colorado |url=https://www.census.gov/quickfacts/bouldercitycolorado |work=U.S. Census Bureau |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> The city's median household income exceeds $80,000 annually, though this figure coexists with high housing costs that leave many lower- and middle-income residents financially strained. | ||
The age distribution in Boulder skews younger than the national average. The university population drives this pattern. Students enrolled at CU Boulder represent a significant share of the city's residents at any given time. Constant turnover of student cohorts keeps the median age relatively low even as longer-term residents and retiring faculty age in place. The result is a city that simultaneously sustains a youthful energy tied to campus life and a more established professional community with deep roots in the local economy and civic institutions. | |||
== Education == | |||
The | The [[University of Colorado Boulder]] is the city's dominant institution and exerts a substantial influence on nearly every aspect of Boulder's character. Founded in 1876 and opened in 1877, the university has grown into a major public research institution enrolling more than 35,000 students across undergraduate, graduate, and professional programs.<ref>{{cite web |title=Enrollment Summary |url=https://www.colorado.edu/oda/enrollment/enrollment-summary |work=University of Colorado Boulder Office of Data Analytics |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> CU Boulder has produced three Nobel laureates on its faculty and is home to several federally funded research centers, including the [[National Center for Atmospheric Research]] (NCAR), which is located just south of the city on a mesa designed by architect [[I. M. Pei]].<ref>{{cite web |title=About CU Boulder |url=https://www.colorado.edu/about |work=University of Colorado Boulder |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> | ||
The | The university's presence creates a consistent cycle of population renewal as students arrive each fall and depart after graduation. A permanent population of faculty, staff, and university-affiliated residents constitute a significant share of the professional workforce. CU Boulder's research operations contribute substantially to the local economy through direct employment, federal grant expenditures, and the spin-off technology companies that the university's engineering and sciences programs generate. | ||
Boulder Valley School District serves the city's K-12 population and is consistently ranked among the higher-performing public school districts in Colorado. The district operates numerous elementary, middle, and high schools within the city, with Boulder High School and Fairview High School serving as the principal secondary institutions. Both schools send a high proportion of | |||
== References == | == References == | ||
<references /> | <references /> | ||
Latest revision as of 07:45, 12 May 2026
- Boulder, Colorado
Boulder is a city in Colorado situated at the base of the Rocky Mountain foothills, approximately 25 miles northwest of Denver, and serves as the county seat of Boulder County. Founded in 1859 by a party of gold prospectors who recognized the site's potential as a supply point for mountain mining camps, the city has grown into one of the most distinctive mid-sized cities in the American West.[1] The University of Colorado Boulder, established in 1876, anchors the city's institutional life and enrolls more than 35,000 students, giving Boulder a pronounced college-town character that shapes its economy, demographics, and daily rhythm.[2] The city holds more than 45,000 acres of protected open space managed by its Open Space and Mountain Parks department, a figure that reflects more than five decades of municipal land acquisition funded largely through a dedicated sales tax.[3]
According to the U.S. Census Bureau, Boulder's population was approximately 105,112 as of the 2020 census, a figure that rises considerably when the university's student population is included in seasonal counts.[4] The city's median household income and educational attainment rates rank among the highest of any American city of comparable size, a pattern closely tied to the concentration of university faculty, research professionals, and technology workers in the local workforce.[5] Boulder gets about 300 days of measurable sunshine per year. That's a climatic feature often mentioned when describing the city, and it's directly responsible for the outdoor recreation culture that defines Boulder life.[6]
History
Boulder's recorded history among European Americans begins in the autumn of 1858, when a party of prospectors from Nebraska led by Thomas Aikins camped at the mouth of Boulder Canyon while searching for gold in the Front Range foothills. They returned the following February, staked a townsite, and established the Boulder City Town Company in February 1859.[7] The settlement grew quickly as a supply hub for miners working the mountain canyons to the west. By 1861, when Colorado Territory was formally organized, Boulder had already developed a commercial district and a small but stable residential population.
The territorial legislature selected Boulder as the home of the Colorado Territory's first university in 1861, though the University of Colorado Boulder didn't open its doors until September 1877, a year after Colorado achieved statehood. The founding class consisted of just 44 students and one building. Old Main still stands on campus. Early decades brought financial hardship and uncertain enrollment for the young institution.[8] Through the twentieth century, though, the university's growth transformed Boulder from a modest agricultural and mining service town into a city whose identity was defined largely by its relationship to higher education and research.
Among the notable developments in Boulder's early institutional history was the construction of health and wellness facilities that drew visitors from across the region. A sanitarium was built on Mapleton Hill in 1896, replacing an earlier facility that had reached capacity.[9] The Boulder Colorado Sanitarium represented an expansion of the city's role as a destination for health-seeking travelers. This function preceded by decades the outdoor recreation identity Boulder would later develop. The sanitarium era reflected a broader national trend in which western cities at altitude marketed their climates as remedies for respiratory and nervous conditions.
Boulder's modern character was shaped significantly by policy decisions made in the 1950s and 1960s. In 1959, the city adopted the "Blue Line," a municipal ordinance that prohibited the extension of city water service above a specific elevation contour on the foothills to the west, effectively capping residential development on the mountain slopes.[10] The following decade brought the establishment of the open space program. Boulder voters approved a dedicated sales tax for open land acquisition in 1967, making the city one of the first in the United States to fund green space preservation through a self-imposed local tax.[11] These decisions set the physical parameters within which the city would grow for the remainder of the twentieth century and into the twenty-first.
The City of Boulder administers an historic context program that collects and organizes information about related historic sites and events according to theme and geography.[12] The program designates individual landmarks and historic districts, provides guidance for property owners undertaking renovations, and maintains documentary records that form the basis for preservation decisions. Mapleton Hill, site of the 1896 sanitarium, falls within the scope of the city's preservation activities and contains one of Boulder's most intact concentrations of Victorian-era residential architecture.[13]
Geography and Natural Environment
Boulder sits at an elevation of 5,430 feet (1,655 meters) at the point where the Great Plains meet the Rocky Mountain foothills. The Flatirons, a series of steeply tilted sandstone slabs, rise directly above the western edge of the city and make this geological boundary immediately visible. The Flatirons are composed of Fountain Formation sedimentary rock deposited roughly 300 million years ago and subsequently upended by tectonic forces. Their near-vertical west faces reach heights above 7,000 feet and are visible from much of the Boulder Valley.[14] They form the visual backdrop for the city. Among the most photographed geological features in Colorado.
Boulder Creek runs east-west through the center of the city, draining mountain snowmelt and storm runoff from the high terrain above Boulder Canyon. The creek corridor is managed as a linear open space and recreational trail connecting the mountains to the plains. In September 2013, a slow-moving storm system dropped roughly 9 to 15 inches of rain across the Front Range watershed over four days. Boulder Creek overflowed its banks. The damage statewide reached an estimated $4 billion, with substantial destruction in Boulder and surrounding communities.[15]
The city has accumulated more than 45,000 acres of protected open space, managed by the city's Open Space and Mountain Parks department.[16] This network encompasses mountain parks, creek corridors, agricultural preserves, and grassland areas that provide wildlife habitat, recreational access, and a physical boundary preventing the kind of sprawling suburban development that has absorbed many comparable Front Range communities. The open space program is funded through a dedicated sales tax that Boulder voters have renewed and expanded multiple times since the program's founding in 1967. The scale of protected land relative to the city's population is exceptional among American cities, more than 400 acres per 1,000 residents. It's frequently cited as a defining feature of Boulder's identity.
Natural hazards recur alongside the region's many amenities. Wildfires pose a serious and growing threat to the open spaces and residential areas adjacent to the foothills. In December 2021, the Marshall Fire burned through the communities of Superior and Louisville just southeast of Boulder, destroying more than 1,000 structures in a matter of hours and becoming the most destructive wildfire in Colorado's recorded history.[17] Fires have continued to threaten areas closer to the city itself in subsequent years. The Goat Trail Fire ignited in the hills near Boulder before fire crews contained it and authorities lifted all evacuation warnings.[18] These events reflect the increasing pressure on the urban-wildland interface across the Colorado Front Range, where prolonged drought and warming temperatures have extended the fire season and raised the intensity of burns that occur.
Climate
Boulder's climate is semi-arid, marked by low humidity, abundant sunshine, and pronounced seasonal variation. The city averages approximately 300 days per year with measurable sunshine, a figure that reflects the dryness of the region and the rain-shadow effect created by the Rocky Mountains to the west.[19] Average high temperatures in July reach approximately 90°F (32°C), while January highs average near 45°F (7°C), though temperatures can drop sharply during cold fronts. Annual snowfall averages around 90 inches, with the heaviest snowfalls typically occurring in March and April rather than in the depths of winter. That's a pattern common to the Colorado Front Range.[20]
One of Boulder's distinctive meteorological features is the Chinook wind, locally called the "Boulder wind" or simply a downslope wind. These events periodically push warm, dry air down the eastern slopes of the Rockies and into the city. Temperatures can rise by 30°F or more within hours, while relative humidity drops to single digits. That creates extreme fire weather conditions. The same Chinook conditions that produced unseasonably warm temperatures on December 30, 2021, contributed directly to the rapid spread of the Marshall Fire later that day.[21]
Demographics
According to the 2020 U.S. Census, Boulder had a population of 105,112.[22] The city's population is notably homogeneous by national standards. Approximately 85 percent of residents identified as white alone in the 2020 census, with Hispanic or Latino residents comprising roughly 8 percent, Asian residents approximately 5 percent, and Black or African American residents approximately 1 percent.[23] The city's racial composition has been a subject of ongoing discussion among residents and city officials, with Boulder acknowledging that housing costs and historical patterns of land use have contributed to barriers for lower-income and minority populations.
Educational attainment in Boulder is exceptionally high. More than 75 percent of Boulder residents aged 25 and older hold a bachelor's degree or higher. That compares to a national average of roughly 33 percent. The disparity reflects both the presence of the university and the concentration of knowledge-sector workers in the local economy.[24] The city's median household income exceeds $80,000 annually, though this figure coexists with high housing costs that leave many lower- and middle-income residents financially strained.
The age distribution in Boulder skews younger than the national average. The university population drives this pattern. Students enrolled at CU Boulder represent a significant share of the city's residents at any given time. Constant turnover of student cohorts keeps the median age relatively low even as longer-term residents and retiring faculty age in place. The result is a city that simultaneously sustains a youthful energy tied to campus life and a more established professional community with deep roots in the local economy and civic institutions.
Education
The University of Colorado Boulder is the city's dominant institution and exerts a substantial influence on nearly every aspect of Boulder's character. Founded in 1876 and opened in 1877, the university has grown into a major public research institution enrolling more than 35,000 students across undergraduate, graduate, and professional programs.[25] CU Boulder has produced three Nobel laureates on its faculty and is home to several federally funded research centers, including the National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR), which is located just south of the city on a mesa designed by architect I. M. Pei.[26]
The university's presence creates a consistent cycle of population renewal as students arrive each fall and depart after graduation. A permanent population of faculty, staff, and university-affiliated residents constitute a significant share of the professional workforce. CU Boulder's research operations contribute substantially to the local economy through direct employment, federal grant expenditures, and the spin-off technology companies that the university's engineering and sciences programs generate.
Boulder Valley School District serves the city's K-12 population and is consistently ranked among the higher-performing public school districts in Colorado. The district operates numerous elementary, middle, and high schools within the city, with Boulder High School and Fairview High School serving as the principal secondary institutions. Both schools send a high proportion of
References
- ↑ Template:Cite web
- ↑ Template:Cite web
- ↑ Template:Cite web
- ↑ Template:Cite web
- ↑ Template:Cite web
- ↑ Template:Cite web
- ↑ Template:Cite web
- ↑ Template:Cite web
- ↑ Template:Cite web
- ↑ Template:Cite web
- ↑ Template:Cite web
- ↑ Template:Cite web
- ↑ Template:Cite web
- ↑ Template:Cite web
- ↑ Template:Cite web
- ↑ Template:Cite web
- ↑ Template:Cite web
- ↑ Template:Cite web
- ↑ Template:Cite web
- ↑ Template:Cite web
- ↑ Template:Cite web
- ↑ Template:Cite web
- ↑ Template:Cite web
- ↑ Template:Cite web
- ↑ Template:Cite web
- ↑ Template:Cite web