9291274db69ce9574770ca7908e63408de77358f
dschmelt
  Wed Sep 22 17:43:46 2021 -0700
Adding colon from code review refs #28187

diff --git src/hg/htdocs/goldenPath/help/hgTracksHelp.html src/hg/htdocs/goldenPath/help/hgTracksHelp.html
index 5f93ffe..bf374da 100755
--- src/hg/htdocs/goldenPath/help/hgTracksHelp.html
+++ src/hg/htdocs/goldenPath/help/hgTracksHelp.html
@@ -95,31 +95,31 @@
 lead to sequence details and supplementary off-site databases. To control information overload, 
 tracks need not be displayed in full. Tracks can be hidden, collapsed into a condensed or 
 single-line display, or filtered according to the user's criteria. Zooming and scrolling controls 
 help to narrow or broaden the displayed chromosomal range to focus on the exact region of interest. 
 Clicking on an individual item within a track opens a details page containing a summary of 
 properties and links to off-site repositories such as PubMed, GenBank, Entrez, and OMIM. The page 
 provides item-specific information on position, cytoband, strand, data source, and encoded protein, 
 mRNA, genomic sequence and alignment, as appropriate to the nature of the track.</p>
 <p>
 A blue navigation bar at the top of the browser provides links to several other tools and data 
 sources. For instance, under the &quot;View&quot; menu, the &quot;DNA&quot; link enables the user 
 to view the raw genomic DNA sequence for the coordinate range displayed in the browser window. This 
 DNA can encode track features via elaborate text formatting options. Other links tie the Genome 
 Browser to the BLAT alignment tool, provide access to the underlying relational database via the
 Table Browser, convert coordinates across different assembly dates, and open the window at the 
-complementary <a href="http//www.ensembl.org/" target="_blank">Ensembl</a> or 
+complementary <a href="http://www.ensembl.org/" target="_blank">Ensembl</a> or 
 <a href="https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/genome/gdv/" target="_blank">NCBI Genome Data Viewer</a> annotation.</p>
 <p>
 The browser data represents an immense <a href="../credits.html">collaborative effort</a> involving 
 thousands of people from the international biomedical research community. The UCSC Bioinformatics 
 Group itself does no sequencing. Although it creates the majority of the annotation tracks in-house,
 the annotations are based on publicly available data contributed by many labs and research groups 
 throughout the world. Several of the Genome Browser annotations are generated in collaboration with 
 outside individuals or are contributed wholly by external research groups. UCSC's other major roles 
 include building genome assemblies, creating the Genome Browser work environment, and serving it 
 online. The majority of the sequence data, annotation tracks, and even software are in the public 
 domain and are available for anyone to <a href="#Download">download</a>.</p> 
 <p>
 In addition to the Genome Browser, the UCSC Genome Bioinformatics group provides several other tools
 for viewing and interpreting genome data: 
 <ul>