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  • ...erated in [[Chicago, Illinois]] from 1948, until she was shipwreck, sister ship to the [[Victor L. Schlaeger (fireboat)]]
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  • Deployed in the 1950s, the first operational ship-borne [[surface-to-air missile]] of the U.S. Navy
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  • ...ere near Canis Major and Pyxis, its name is Latin for the 'poop deck' on a ship.
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  • The [[United Nations]] agency responsible for avoiding pollution from [[ship]]s, and implementing the [[Safety of Life at Sea]] convention
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  • 2024 maritime disaster; a fully-laden container ship collided with a road bridge in Baltimore harbor, causing it to collapse.
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  • ...generators and electric motors turn the propellers, used on some [[cruise ship]]s
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  • ...ov">Postnikov, A. (2002).</ref> In June, 1807 she became the first Russian ship to make contact with Australia.<ref>Massov (2006), pp. 203-214.</ref>}} ...ed 16-20 guns, but some had up to 28. Sloops were generally assumed to be "ship-rigged", with three masts and square sails, but small seagoing vessels with
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  • A 60-gun sailing warship of the [[fourth rate ship|fourth rate]]
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  • One of the U.S. [[attack cargo ship]] types of the [[Second World War]]
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  • A [[United States Navy]] [[amphibious assault ship]], homeported in [[San Diego, California]]; flagship of [[Task Force 151]]
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  • The latest class of British destroyer, a large multirole ship with very strong [[anti-air warfare]] capabilities, with the first vessel o
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  • ...attleship; used by the Japanese [[Yamato-class]] but never fired against a ship or shore target
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  • in the United States Navy, one commissioned ship and one commissioned submarine; see [[Wikipedia:USS Dallas]]
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  • Lead ship of the [[Burke-class]] of U.S. [[destroyer]]s, named for ADM [[Arleigh Burk
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  • ...a few plucky inhabitants maintain a museum, periodically visited by cruise ship tourists
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  • A class of [[attack cargo ship]]s of the [[United States Navy]], primarily in the Second World War
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  • * ''[[HMS Justinian|Justinian]]'', 74-gun [[Ship of the line|ship-of-the-line]] (''[[Mr. Midshipman Hornblower]]'', [[Midshipman]]) *''[[HMS Renown (1798)|Renown]]'', 74-gun two-deck [[ship-of-the-line]] (''[[Lieutenant Hornblower]]'', [[Lieutenant]])
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  • ...ssigned to true [[boat]]s, defined as vessels that can be carried aboard a ship. Some of the categories below are not in U.S. naval service, but are in act A T-prefix, usually to an auxiliary type, denotes, a ship crewed by civilian mariners but in service of naval forces.
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  • A two-ship class of [[aircraft carrier]]s, the first built by the [[United States Navy
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  • Defined by ''[[HMS Dreadnought (1905)]]'', an oceangoing, armored ship with a large number of all or primarily large-caliber guns, mounted in tur
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  • ...s and for [[naval gunfire support]]; retired but ''USS Salem'' is a museum ship
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  • ...missile, which can be fired from land, aircraft, helicopter, submarine and ship platforms, and which has a considerable combat record
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  • Built in 1916, in 1929 she was the first ship to visit the brand new port of [[Churchill, Manitoba]]
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  • * [[Montana (ship)|''Montana'' (ship)]], a paddle steamer wrecked in 1863
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  • =====Carrier vs. Ship===== {{r|Amphibious Assault Ship||**}}
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  • ...ncorporating the ship's bridge, right up in the bow, and another, over the ship's engines, right in the stern. The Algolake has a single superstructure in ...uperstructure, meaning the cabins and pilothouse, in the rear (aft) of the ship. Before this, their ships had the pilothouse forward.
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  • ''His Majesty's Ship'' in German, prefix for the name of First World War German warships (abbrev
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  • [[Littoral Combat Ship]] class developed by [[General Dynamics]]; partial [[trimaran]] hull; large
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  • Of the largest [[amphibious warfare]] ship type in the [[United States Navy]], a [[Wasp-class]] [[Landing Helicopter
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  • A term for the crew of a ship, most often a military vessel but also used for civilian craft.
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  • ...ere near Canis Major and Pyxis; its name is Latin for the 'poop deck' on a ship. ...riginally part of an [[obsolete constellation]] called [[Argo Navis]], the Ship Argo, which was so large that it was eventually split into four separate sm
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  • A ceremonial and administrative step in the building and deployment of a ship, usually a naval vessel
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  • ...d raiding, the predecessor of the modern [[cruiser]]. In comparison, the [[ship of the line]] was analogous to the [[battleship]] when big-gunned battleshi "Frigate", in modern use, covers a very wide range of ship types, with the definition dependent on the navy and time.
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  • {{r|Ship}} {{r|Passenger ship}}
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  • An example of the largest [[amphibious warfare]] ship type in the [[United States Navy]], a [[Wasp-class]] [[Landing Helicopter
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  • An example of the largest [[amphibious warfare]] ship type in the [[United States Navy]], a [[Wasp-class]] [[Landing Helicopter
    202 bytes (26 words) - 10:08, 10 February 2023
  • ...and 30-40 troops, or small vehicles, on a beach, withdraw, and return to a ship
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  • {{rpl|Medusa (French ship)}}
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  • The government of China has built or is building several new '''Chinese ship lifts'''. ...entire basin that the vessels enter, then water-tight doors close, and the ship lift raises or lowers the entire basin.
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  • ...f Francis Scott Key Bridge in Baltimore collapses after being hit by large ship; cars in water |work=CBS News |date=March 26, 2024}}</ref> .../mar/26/baltimore-bridge-ship-previous-collision-antwerp-2016 |title=Cargo ship that hit Baltimore bridge was involved in Antwerp collision in 2016 |work=T
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  • Launched in 2013 this vessel was the lead ship in a new class of [[Lake freighter]]s designed to be more energy efficient
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  • A medium-sized [[amphibious warfare]] ship that primarily uses [[helicopter]]s to land troops; it does not have the we
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  • ...up]], the LPD usually operates closer to shore than a [[Amphibious Assault Ship]], because the LPD is the main carrier of large [[landing craft]], while th ...uld beach themselves to unload, some seagoing types, such as the [[Landing Ship Tank]], also had beaching capability.
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  • His (Her) Majesty's Australian Ship, the prefix for warships of the Royal Australian Navy
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  • A single journey by a single military aircraft or ship, as part of one or more missions
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  • An advanced Soviet/Russian attack submarine armed with extremely large anti-ship [[P-700 Granit]] [[cruise missile]]s and 650mm wake-homing [[torpedo]]es, b
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  • ...as a single metric, it was pure number of guns, not gun type or caliber. A ship might be described as ''USS Constitution (44)'', indicating 44 guns of all ...g at once. An exceptionally skilled captain might be able to maneuver his ship so that he could turn and get a second broadside on the same target, or per
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  • ...ical launch system]]); decommissioned but first used as testbed for "smart ship" technology run by [[Microsoft Windows]]
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  • A family of Russian supersonic, sea-skimming [[anti-shipping missile]]s, ship- and air-launched, all designated by NATO as the [[SS-N-22 SUNBURN]] [[guid
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  • U.S. Navy [[destroyer]]s of a 1935 design, slightly slower than the two-ship [[Gridley-class]], with the same powerplant and weapons as the [[Mahan-clas
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  • The term originated in the days of sail, when a ship's speed was roughly measured with an apparatus consisting of a float, an ho
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  • ...an 5000 sailors and [[United States Marine Corps|Marines]] assigned to the ship's company and embarked carrier air wing.
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  • ...p-class]] [[Landing Helicopter Dock]], the largest [[amphibious warfare]] ship type in the [[United States Navy]]; homeported at [[Sasebo]], [[Japan]] and
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  • ...ted States Navy]] and [[U.S. Army]], a high-speed, shallow-water transport ship intended for intra-theater logistics support in [[littoral (military)|litto
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  • ...rious naval vessels, widely used worldwide but with the specific name of a ship type subject to national usage
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  • ...anding craft]] type that is not tightly dependent on an amphibious warfare ship for support, but can sail for 10 days as a coastal transport
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  • Originally planned as an eight-ship "supercarrier" class, the first large [[aircraft carrier]] built with angle
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  • ...ecks were discovered in 1962. The Skuldelev 2 is now housed in the Viking Ship Musueum. .... Using authentic materials and building methods, with replica tools, the ship was built between 2000 and 2004. The reconstruction project and its associ
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  • ...d. Fearing that insurers would refuse to pay out, they opted to rename the ship, [[scuttling|scuttle]] it, make this look like an accident and collect the
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  • Commercial U.K. trasport ship, sunk during the [[Falklands War]] by an Argentinean [[Exocet]] [[anti-ship
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  • The first [[Chinese]] ship to transit from a Chinese port to [[Europe]] by crossing the top of [[Asia]
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  • ...rcraft carrier converted from [[Cleveland-class]] light cruiser hull; lead ship of [[Independence (carrier)-class]]; served 1942-1946; sunk in 1951 nuclear
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  • ...arine warfare|antisubmarine]] [[torpedo]], air-dropped, fired from surface ship tubes, carried by [[RUM-139 Vertical Launch ASROC]]; being replaced by [[Ma
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  • ...vate Robertson V.C.jpg|300px|thumb|The CCGS ''Private Robertson'' a sister ship to the ''Corporal Teather''.]] {|{{Infobox ship begin}}
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  • A military aircraft, ship, weapon, or other asset with such power, either as a [[force multiplier]] o
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  • Sometimes called the luckiest ship in the WWII Japanese Navy, a [[destroyer]] that was the sole survivor of th
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  • | [[Ship ceremonies|Laid down]]: | [[Ship ceremonies|Launched]]:
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  • Second ship of the Scharnhorst-class, German [[battlecruiser]] of the [[Second World Wa
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  • A seagoing [[amphibious warfare]] ship with a well deck that can be flooded to let landing craft enter and leave u
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  • ...uri and USS Alaska.jpg/credit}}<br />USS ''Missouri'' (BB-63) (the largest ship) and the [[battlecruiser]] [[USS Alaska (CB-1)|USS ''Alaska'' (CB-1)]] (on ...essel on whose deck the Japanese surrender was signed; she is now a museum ship at [[Pearl Harbor]], [[Hawaii (U.S. state)]].
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  • ...) may refer to a Greek island or to an ancient Greek calculator found in a ship wreck off that island.
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  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>Two-ship class of German [[battleship]]s, optimized for commerce raiding and short A
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  • Large German commercial passenger-carrying rigid airship, the lead ship of the Hindenburg class, the largest flying machines of any kind ever built
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  • An ''Andromeda'' class attack cargo ship that was deployed during World War II and the Korean War; it could carry he
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  • ...mpetition for the award is, and has always been, extremely keen. To win, a ship or unit must demonstrate the highest state of battle readiness. ...ing the certifications and qualifications conducted throughout the year. A ship’s performance during training exercises, weapons inspections, and tactica
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  • A 1956 [[MGM]] science fiction movie in which the crew of a space ship encounters the sole survivors of a colony on a distant planet.
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  • {{r|Ship of the Line (book)|''Ship of the Line''}}
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  • Homeported in the Pacific base of Bangor, WA, the first ship of the [[Ohio-class]], converted to a [[SSGN]] that fired [[BGM-109 Tomahaw
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  • A single-ship class of 14,500 ton U.S. Navy [[aircraft carrier]], purpose-built under tre
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  • {{rpl|Ithaca (ship)}}
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  • A WWII-era U.S. Navy ship designed specifically to carry heavy equipment, supplies and troops in supp
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  • ...ted States, considered exceptionally able but choosing to go down with his ship at the [[Battle of Midway]].
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  • ...[[Landing Helicopter Dock]], which is the largest [[amphibious warfare]] ship type in the [[United States Navy]]; assigned to [[Expeditionary Strike Gro
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  • A merchant ship used as a decoy vessel in that it was equipped with a substantial but conce
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  • ...chnologies were developed and used, based on different fuels, engines, and ship/water interfaces. ...ter interfaces'''. Early marine engines used [[paddlewheel]]s to drive the ship through the water. In the mid- to late 19th century, paddlewheels were repl
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  • ...d but rebuilt). These ships were originally designated Alternative Landing Ship Logistic [ALSL].<ref name=GS-LASL>{{citation | title = Bay Class Large Amphibious Landing Ships/Alternative Landing Ship Logistic [ALSL]
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  • ...ntional minesweeping; fiberglass hull; to be replaced by [[Littoral Combat Ship]]s
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  • The second ship in the ''[[USNS Mission Buenaventura (T-AO-111)|Mission Buenaventura]]''-cl
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  • ...first [[precision guided munition]] to be used by an aircraft to attack a ship; a visually-guided rocket-boosted bomb
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  • The eleventh ship in the ''[[USNS Mission Buenaventura (T-AO-111)|Mission Buenaventura]]''-cl
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  • The twelfth ship in the ''[[USNS Mission Buenaventura (T-AO-111)|Mission Buenaventura]]''-cl
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  • The sixth ship in the ''[[USNS Mission Buenaventura (T-AO-111)|Mission Buenaventura]]''-cl
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  • ...; last class of battleships that operated in any navy. She is now a museum ship in [[Pearl Harbor]], [[Hawaii (U.S. state)]].
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  • | [[Ship ceremonies|Laid down]]: | [[Ship ceremonies|Launched]]:
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  • ...eavy cruiser]]s, converted to [[Albany-class]] missile cruisers, a command ship, or scrapped/cancelled
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  • The lead ship in the ''[[USNS Mission Buenaventura (T-AO-111)|Mission Buenaventura]]''-cl
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  • The fourteenth ship in the ''[[USNS Mission Buenaventura (T-AO-111)|Mission Buenaventura]]''-cl
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  • Lead ship of the class of the biggest [[battleship]]s ever built; sunk by U.S. carrie
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  • Being [[ship commissioning|commissioned]] in the U.S. Navy in July 2009, the '''''USS Ja | title = Ship named for MoH recipient to be christened
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  • ...optimized for making a long, straight, slow and level approach to a target ship, to drop a heavy [[torpedo]] within a critical set of flight parameters
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  • The twenty-seventh and final ship in the ''[[USNS Mission Buenaventura (T-AO-111)|Mission Buenaventura]]''-cl
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  • ...osion during the [[Gulf War]] that would have sunk larger WWII ships; test ship for the Block IV [[BGM-109 Tomahawk]] missile
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  • A member of the largest [[amphibious warfare]] ship type in the [[United States Navy]], a [[Wasp-class]] [[Landing Helicopter
    295 bytes (38 words) - 09:00, 9 August 2023
  • ...erence between a boat and a [[ship]] is that a boat can be lifted aboard a ship, although there are some very large boats that can be taken aboard only lar
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  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>A three-ship class of 20,700 ton British [[aircraft carrier]]s; initially called "throug
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  • | [[Ship ceremonies|Laid down]]: | [[Ship ceremonies|Launched]]:
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  • ...gle Stokes, who shot himself in a fit of depression on August 1828 and the ship was subsequently placed under the command of Robert Fitzroy. Fitzroy invite ...per masts were dismantled and taken away. In September, a small caboose [a ship’s kitchen] was installed on deck.
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  • ...z-class]] but incorporating a number of features making her a transitional ship to the next generation of the [[Gerald R. Ford-class]]
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  • An 1839 [[mutiny]] near Cuba by Spanish slaves who took over a slave ship, sailed to the U.S., and were sent back to [[Africa]] after a dramatic [[Su
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  • ...SS Boxer''''' went into U.S. operational service in 1995. She is the sixth ship to carry that name in the U.S. Navy, the first four being sailing warships
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  • ...to [[foreign]] lands, by different methods of [[transportation]] such as [[ship]], [[airplane]], [[railroad]], [[balloon]], or [[spaceship]]. In Britain, i
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  • ...y]] transports; used for [[anti-submarine warfare]] as a quickly-available ship before purpose-built warships were in service; surprisingly distinguished r
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  • ...eral maintenance fix-up, renovation, and often modernization of the entire ship.
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  • |Turtle Ship.jpg| |Turtle ship in action.jpg|
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  • ...hers were added, which could throw depth charges away from the axis of the ship's course. ...threw a pattern of small, contact-fuzed explosive projectiles ahead of the ship. These exploded only if they made contact with the submarine, so their nois
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  • ====[[Littoral Control Ship]]==== ...ne amphibious assault ship, one logistics ship and three [[Littoral Combat Ship]]s. It also calls for 18 [[EF-18 Growler]]s; 24 [[F-18 Super Hornet|F/A-18E
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  • {{r|Quebecois (ship)}}
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  • A ship with one of the most distinguished combat records of the [[Second World War | title = USS Enterprise CV-6, The Most Decorated Ship of the Second World War: Decorations
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  • ...sidered the senior [[warrant officer|warrant]] or [[petty officer]] of the ship. Boatswains' Mates are more junior. Boatswains deal with the core tasks of making a ship work: line handling, deck maintenance, anchoring, etc. Part of their tradi
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  • ...d arguably the first true carrier even though a conversion from a merchant ship hull; launched 1914, renamed HMS Pegasus in 1934 to free the name, and scra
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  • ...ht [[underway replenishment]] Military Sealift Command fast combat support ship ''USNS Arctic'' (T AOE 8) in the [[Persian Gulf]]]] ...e need for precision position keeping, but managing the strains on ship-to-ship transfer rigging.
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  • A ship from [[Ancient Greece|Greek]] [[mythology]] which carried the [[hero]] [[Ja
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  • Cargo ship designed by the U.S. Maritime Administration; 465 of these ships were built
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  • '''Beam''' - The width of the ship ...ength''' - The distance between the forwardmost and aftermost parts of the ship.
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  • ...nown as longboats, lasted from the 9th century to the 11th, and influenced ship building across northern Europe.<ref>McGrail, Sean (1989). James Graham-Cam ...cavated in 1880, dates to the late 9th century; it is housed in the Viking Ship Museum in Oslo. Constructed largely of oak, the vessel is 24 m long and 5 m
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  • A four-ship class of 35,000 ton U.S. Navy [[battleship]] begun just before the Second W
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  • A two-ship class of U.S. Navy [[battleship]]s, originally to Treaty requirements and
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  • | ''[[Chicago Tribune (ship, 1930)|Chicago Tribune]]'' || 1930 || 970 || 2960 || | ''[[Franquelin (ship, 1936)|Franquelin]]'' || 1936 || 1000 || 2097 ||Prince Ungava 1964-67/Jean-
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  • *[http://www.britannica.com/titanic Titanic: The Unsinkable Ship] - [[Encyclopaedia Britannica]] pages and features.
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  • ...signed to be an [[angled deck]] slightly offset from the centerline of the ship
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  • A naval support ship that can transfer supplies, including fuel, to other warships that are unde
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  • Of the largest [[amphibious warfare]] ship type in the [[United States Navy]], a [[Wasp-class]] [[Landing Helicopter
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  • ...Inq/USReport/AmInqRep07.php#a7 |title=United States Senate Inquiry &ndash; Ship Sinking |work=<i>Titanic</i> Inquiry |year=1912}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url
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  • ...etter of marque would allow, for example, a private ship to engage a cargo ship and sink it, seize its cargo, or take its crew prisoner (or any combination
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  • ...vity%20B%20-%20Final%20Report%20Consolidated.pdf Treatment and Disposal of Ship-Generated Solid and Liquid Wastes] (Regional Marine Pollution Emergency Res
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  • An evolving series of ship-launched [[guided missile]]s developed by the U.S. Navy and used by a numbe
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  • A subset of [[underway replenishment]], in which the supply ship and the warship being resupplied do not physically connect, but use [[helic
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  • | publisher = [[Ship's Log: USS Atule]]
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  • A subset of [[underway replenishment]], in which the supply ship and the [[warship]] being resupplied stay in a close formation, making tran
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  • ...traveling due east (i.e., compass bearing 090), the relative bearing to a ship at "three o'clock" would be 0 degrees.
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  • A [[boat]] or other self-propelled watercraft, carried aboard a [[ship]], intended for [[amphibious warfare]] or similar operations where landings
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  • [[U.S. Navy/Catalogs/Ship Classes]]
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  • Second ship of the [[United States Navy]] to bear the name, a [[heavy cruiser]] of the
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  • ...adelphia'', which had run aground off the coast of Tripoli, and burned the ship to the waterline.
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  • ...ern enclose the rear launching ramp. A door covers its opening, where the ship's name can be seen.
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  • ...MARCOM funded and administered the largest and most successful [[merchant ship|merchant shipbuilding]] program in American history, building almost 6,000 ...achieve this aim by providing financial subsidies to U.S. shipbuilding and ship operating companies, in order that they could compete with their foreign eq
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  • '''Privateering''' was a government authorized form of [[piracy]]. A ship owner or captain would be given the authority, through a document known as
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  • {{r|Betelgeuse (ship, 2021)}}
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  • Two-ship class of 30,000 ton U.S. Navy "large cruisers" with 12" main battery, 27,50
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  • | contribution = Ship's Namesake In 1941, DD-245 was in a blocking position between ammunition ship in the convoy and the known position of a German U-Boat Wolfpack. Of the c
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  • ...she entered commission on January 25 1988. ''Young Endeavour'' is a sister ship to the ''Tunas Samudera'' of the Malaysian Navy which was constructed at th ...ngendeavour.gov.au/site/ship.php Young Endeavour Youth Scheme] - About the Ship</ref>
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  • ...went on, making it the country's single largest shipyard. At its peak, Sun Ship operated four shipyards employing more than 40,000 workers. One of the yard Sun Ship built 281 [[T-2 tanker]]s during WWII, about 40% of all the U.S. tankers bu
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  • ...erted lifeboat, from Antarctica to South Georgia, to seek help after their ship was wrecked. After making the 900 mile journey in some of the roughest wat File:Explorer II South Georgia.jpg| A small cruise ship visiting Grytviken
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  • ...[[Operation Torch]], raided Norway; returned to the US and was a training ship for the rest of the war
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  • ...unching an [[anti-submarine warfare|antisubmarine]] torpedo from a surface ship, often by an [[unguided rocket]] booster, moving it at greater speed and r
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  • ...les/magazine/ah/1958/2/1958_2_65.shtml Nevins and Hill tell story of Peace Ship in ''American Heritage''] ...istory.com/proto/story.asp?id=42 College student reports on the 1915 Peace Ship expedition]
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  • | title = HMCS CANADA: Auxiliary Patrol Ship ...S CANADA was originally a Canadian Government Ship that served as a patrol ship in the Fisheries Protection Service of Canada, an enforcement agency that w
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  • | occupation = Ship's captain, hotelier ...s old, and had earned his master's certificate, and become a [[Sea captain|ship's captain]], by the time he was 23.<ref name=TheStar2015-03-16/> He and hi
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  • Ordered in 1940 and beginning delivery in 1943, originally twenty-four ship class was the backbone of U.S. WWII [[aircraft carrier]] operation, continu
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  • ...reign Relations military fellow (2008-2009); commanded amphibious assault ship [[USS Essex (LHD-2)|''USS Essex'' (LHD-2)]] and frigate [[USS Carr (FFG-52)
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  • ..., and is a major U.S. military base; it is the base for a [[prepositioning ship]] squadron and a forward base for [[bomber aircraft]] and air refueling tan
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  • ...down the Seine in a series of barges. He dispatches a night raid, in his ship's boats, to raid the French expedition, and destroy its barges, near [[Roue
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  • {{r|Prepositioning ship}}
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  • The '''''Maersk Peary''''' is an [[tanker (ship)|tanker]], operated by the shipping firm [[Maersk Lines]], that was designe ...try on September 19, 2011, and American officers and crew will operate the ship.
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  • {{Image|C2Ship.jpg|right|300px|The ''Donald McKay,'' the first C2 ship to be completed. She was later taken over by the U.S. Navy and renamed USS In 1937, MARCOM distributed tentative designs for criticism by shipbuilders, ship owners and naval architects. The final designs incorporated many changes su
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  • A '''Q-ship''' was an armed merchant vessel used principally by the [[Royal Navy]] duri
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  • {{r|Ithaca (ship)}}
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  • She was launched in 1937 and was the lead ship in her class.
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  • ...[[Battle of Leyte Gulf]]; modernized to angled deck in 1948-1951; recovery ship for five [[NASA]] space missions; scrapped 1972
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  • ...llows ''[[Hornblower and the Atropos]]'', another book in which he and his ship are given a diplomatically sensitive mission. In this book, he meets [[Lad ...s that Spain is now an ally he has already captured the only large Spanish ship on West coast of America, and handed it over to the rich landowner. So he
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  • | title = The Mary Rose: A Great Ship of King Henry VIII ...vidence to suggest that she was converted from a clinker to a carvel built ship during her career.
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  • ...traditional design, where the bridge topped a superstructure right in the ship's bows, and a second superstructure topped her engines, right in the stern. ...[Port Colborne]], in 2016.<ref name=BoatnerdAlgosoo/> The [[Algoma Sault (ship, 2018)|''Algoma Sault'']], completed in China, in 2018, has been described
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  • {{r|Ship of the line}}
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  • ...was, they sank the destroyer ''HMS Sheffield'' and the chartered civilian ship ''MV Atlantic Conveyor'', and damaged the destroyer ''HMS Glamorgan''. ...ian Gulf during the Iran-Iraq War, on 17 May 1987. These badly damaged the ship, which saved itself from sinking but still suffered 37 dead and 21 injured.
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  • {{r|Replenishment ship}}
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  • {{r|Littoral Combat Ship}}
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  • {{r|Ship}}
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  • ...tems]] and under diminishing consideration for U.S. Navy [[Littoral Combat Ship]]; more powerful, expensive, and longer-ranged than competing [[Griffin mis
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  • ...y [[Argentina]] in the 1982 [[Falklands War]]. While she was not the first ship sunk by a [[cruise missile]], she was the first warship that was alert to t
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  • Built in 1818 at Black Rock, New York, the ship was owned by the Lake Erie Steamboat Company. Her regular schedule ran fro ...priver to Lake Erie. The first voyage booked twenty-nine passengers. The ship arrived in Detroit three days later after stops in Erie and Cleveland.
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  • {{seealso|U.S. Navy/Catalogs/Ship classes}} {{r|Ship ceremonies}}
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  • ...Mariana Islands]]; major U.S. military base, including a [[prepositioning ship]] squadron and [[Anderson Air Force Base]] for [[bomber aircraft]] and air
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  • *[[Connor Trinneer]] as ship's engineer Charles 'Trip' Tucker III *[[Dominic Keating]] as the ship's armory officer Malcolm Reed
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  • ...> Twenty-five men, almost half her complement, died during the fire. The ship grounded under the [[Greater New Orleans Bridge]], which began to melt. ...Guard excavated a trench, in the river bottom, intended to safely hold the ship's hull.<ref name=nola2019-04-20/> Unfortunately, in 1999, oil that had bee
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  • |Cruise ship butler.jpg|A butler serving vacationers aboard the cruise ship Queen Victoria, 2008.
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  • ...[[Sovremenny-class]] [[destroyer]]s would have used their long-range anti-ship missiles in part of a massive, multi-layered air, surface and submarine att
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  • {{r|Turtle ship}}
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  • ...fe of a ship. The ceremonies vary from country to country and from ship to ship. [[Warship]]s are often honored differently than [[merchant ships]], and la [[United States Navy]] tradition dictates that each ship constructed for the service be honored on four historic ceremonial occasion
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  • {{r|Ship}}
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  • ...the [[Gulf of Mexico]], but it was connected to the Gulf by the [[Houston Ship Channel]] in the early 19th century. The channel is 43 feet deep - deeper
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  • ...y before she was missed, leading to the largest loss of life of any single-ship disaster in the history of the [[United States Navy]]
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  • {{r|container ship}}
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  • {{r|Littoral Combat Ship}}
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  • ...)|''USS Indianapolis'' (CA-35)]], of this class, sunk with greatest single-ship loss of life in the U.S. Navy
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  • {{rpl|Detroiter (ship, 1892)}}
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  • The '''''Greenhill Park''''' was a [[freighter (cargo ship)|freighter]], built in 1943, that exploded, and burst into flames, in [[Van The ship was owned by the [[Park Steamship Company]], which was owned by Canada's Fe
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  • ...to be confused with the more recent '''CCGS''' for [[Canadian Coast Guard Ship]].
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  • {{r|Prepositioning ship||***}}
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  • ...mber 2008, the region attracted attention from the media when an Ukrainian ship carrying [[T-72]] [[tank (military)|tanks]] was [[hijacking|hijacked]].
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  • ...' oil spill]] was so serious that the ''Pacific Responder'' and her sister ship, the ''[[California Responder]]'' traveled from [[California (U.S. state)|C | url = https://www.nytimes.com/1993/03/27/nyregion/new-oil-skimming-ship-prepares-for-next-spill.html
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  • {{r|Ammunition ship}} {{r|Attack cargo ship}}
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  • ...the [[Thunder Bay (ship, 2013)|''Thunder Bay'']], and the [[Whitefish Bay (ship, 2013)|''Whitefish Bay'']] she was built in China.<ref name=CanadianSailing ...ansportation Company]] launched an earlier vessel named the [[Baie Comeau (ship, 1954)|''Baie Comeau'']] in 1954.<ref name=niagarathisweek2013-11-07/>
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  • {{r|Ship ceremonies}}
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  • ...States Central Command]] in the [[Persian Gulf]]; within Flight IIA, this ship was the first to receive the [[5"-62 caliber gun]] and supporting systems:
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  • ...(fireboat)|''Alfred E. Ronaldson'']], were experimental ''"surface effect ship"'' designs, a design related to [[hovercraft]]s.<ref name=AroundManhattan/>
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  • {{r|Ship of the line||**}}
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  • ...ssel was endangered by an uncontrollable fire, and they were bandoning the ship. ...at the ship's owners falsely claimed there had been an attack, and had the ship set ablaze, in order to file a fraudulent insurance claim.<ref name=Lawsuit
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  • {{r|Littoral Combat Ship}} {{r|Independence (littoral combat ship)-class||**}}
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  • ...rochemical complex.jpg|right|200px|Petrochemical complex on Houston, Texas ship channel.}}
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  • ...n those used by [[Royal Navy]] cruisers but not of battleship calibre. The ship had an extended cruising range and good habitability, but poor armour. ...nd embark, or they would impound the vessel. It was impossible to make the ship fully seaworthy in that time, especially as there were reports of a larger
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  • {{r|Landing Ship Dock}}
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  • {{r|Ship}}
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  • ...tor transports, the LPD operates closer to shore than the primary aviation ship, the [[LHA]] or [[LHD]]. *Crew: Ship's Company: 360 Sailors (28 officers, 332 enlisted) and 3 Marines.
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  • '''Lift locks''', also known as '''ship lifts''' or '''boat lifts''', are an alternative to conventional [[canal lo | [[Strépy-Thieu ship lift|Strépy-Thieu]], [[Belgium]] || 1350 tons || 73.15 metres || 112 x 12
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  • | quote = Route of the cargo ship Yong Sheng, which arrived in Rotterdam on Sept. 10 after sailing across the | title = An Arctic first: Chinese cargo ship reaches Europe via the Northeast Sea Route
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  • {{r|Littoral Combat Ship}}
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  • {{r|Large Amphibious Landing Ship}} {{r|Ship}}
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