Classifier Instance:

Anchor text: Grand Ditch
Target Entity: Grand_Ditch
Preceding Context: In 1890, the first water flowed through the
Succeeding Context: , a diversion canal that sends water from the Never Summer Mountains, which would naturally have drained into the headwaters of the Colorado River, to bolster supplies in Colorado's Front Range Urban Corridor. Constructed primarily by Japanese and Mexican laborers, the ditch was considered an engineering marvel at the time, delivering across the Continental Divide each year. Because roughly 75 percent of Colorado's precipitation falls west of the Rocky Mountains while 80 percent of the population lives east of it, more of these interbasin water transfers, locally known as transmountain diversions, followed. While first envisioned in the late 19th century, construction on the Colorado-Big Thompson Project (C-BT) did not begin until the 1930s. The C-BT now delivers more than eleven times the flow through the Grand Ditch from the Colorado River watershed to cities along the Front Range.
Paragraph Title: Engineering and development
Source Page: Colorado River

Ground Truth Types:

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|  |---wordnet_event_100029378
|  |  |---wordnet_act_100030358
|  |  |  |---wordnet_activity_100407535
|  |  |  |  |---wordnet_diversion_100426928
|  |  |  |  |  |---wordnet_diversion_100426928_rest

Predicted Types:

TypeConfidenceDecision
wordnet_artifact_100021939-1.7166571929366001 0
wordnet_event_100029378-0.3175361307807956 0
wordnet_organization_108008335-2.89655031756649 0
wordnet_person_100007846-2.703881574319168 0
yagoGeoEntity-0.3856750274350767 0
|---wordnet_entity_100001740
|  |---wordnet_artifact_100021939
|  |---wordnet_event_100029378
|  |---wordnet_organization_108008335
|  |---wordnet_person_100007846
|  |---yagoGeoEntity