Main category headings are computerization, field equipment, fleets, marketing, measurement, odorization, pipelines, and miscellaneous. |
|
Nearly all of those sharks are harvested by Spanish fishing fleets, whose other traditional commercial fish species have declined. |
|
Detroit has long pumped out cars that no one wants, only to fob them off on rental fleets for next to nothing. |
|
Certainly the system has not been without its hitches, particularly for fleets. |
|
Their fleets of ships fought and won battles from the coasts of Kerry to Mizen's wild foreland, to the Mull of Kintyre. |
|
Because the ram was the only ship-smashing weapon available, fleets fought in line abeam so as to present as many rams to the enemy as possible. |
|
A powerful corporation that manufactured and distributed the bulk siding and engine ware of all Earth's space fleets. |
|
Today, the shipping, property, hotel and investment company owns one of the world's largest fleets of high-speed jetfoils. |
|
The Clyde puffers were the fleets of 66-foot-long floating lorries that once carried general cargoes to the islands. |
|
Communications between detached fleets and the Admiralty often took weeks, if not months. |
|
Few schools did take the initiative of pre-qualifying the transport contractors and assessing the quality of their fleets. |
|
Between the keelboat and dinghy fleets at Dundee's Royal Tay Yacht Club yesterday more than 40 entries took to the water. |
|
Early in the plot, the two oldest Strang brothers, Mark and Luke, are press-ganged into His Majesty's fleets. |
|
This is a legacy of the Second World War, in which the aircraft carrier replaced the battleship as the capital ship of fleets. |
|
Along with bankrupt airlines cutting their fleets, other airlines are also grounding inefficient aircraft, as well. |
|
December 25, 2009 the Chinese let loose a barrage of nukes and strategic missiles on the combined fleets in the Chihli gulf. |
|
In fact the smog lifted about 10 years ago, after ageing fleets of cars and buses were withdrawn and industries were removed from the centre. |
|
As a part of the fleets and flotillas they operated with land forces to defend ports and installations. |
|
From California to New York, there are about 100 biodiesel stations, which mainly service small commercial fleets. |
|
They were smaller ships that could navigate into the islands, and often they were from family-owned fleets. |
|
|
The Dutch became the leading naval power of the 17th century by assembling provincial, local, and private fleets into a national navy. |
|
Conventional naval strategy was that the opposing fleets approached each other in parallel lines, blasting away at each other as they passed. |
|
In battle, the contending fleets sailed in line ahead, one ship following another, to bring the largest number of guns to bear on the enemy. |
|
There is still some way to go in reducing catches and fishing fleets before benefits can be felt from bigger and healthier stocks, he said. |
|
A country's capabilities depend very much on how her force is divided between armies and fleets. |
|
Many times in our past we have seen enemy fleets in the channel and enemy armies encamped in the continental ports. |
|
Albatrosses fall prey to longlines, baited hooks stretched for miles across the oceans by commercial fishing fleets. |
|
Most fleets have taken the approach that a car which is generally used as an office runabout is an unnecessary expense. |
|
The three commodores all begin giving reasons why their fleets need the reserve the most. |
|
The take-up of such excess loss policies is mainly for fleets with up to five vehicles. |
|
At sea are five giant aircraft carriers, four of which have their own battle fleets of destroyers, cruisers and submarines, totalling 25 ships. |
|
Thousands of dolphins are killed every year by Pacific tuna fishing fleets. |
|
They would then shuttle to and fro between the combat fleets and London, relaying information and directives. |
|
Kinshasa began returning to normal on Monday, with shops reopening and fleets of taxis and buses operating as normal. |
|
However, could it be that these registrations are going into car hire fleets? |
|
But we are also worried because in order to feed these tuna the industry needs other fleets which should fish for the small pelagics to be fed to tuna. |
|
Varun, the mythical wind god obliged and a moderate 10-15 knot northerly, clear skies and a short chop greeted the fleets at the Royal Cliff start line. |
|
The ditches, dikes and reed-edged fleets that crisscross the grazing marshes here are rich in invertebrates, including the scarce emerald damselfly. |
|
And Cummins imports engines fueled by natural gas for mainland bus fleets. |
|
The wind has finally returned and a steady northerly breeze of some 15 knots whisked the monohull and multihull fleets around their respective courses. |
|
|
He produced for the airlines awaiting delivery of 747 fleets sketches of the possibilities. |
|
The salt mine is one of more than 500 fleets using biodiesel fuel. |
|
Formerly hunters of Pacific sperm whale, these whaling fleets came to Arctic regions following the bowhead whale migration to the Beaufort Sea for summer feeding. |
|
Because the two opposing fleets never came face to face, a number of significant incidents of the battle are unrecorded, and these artworks help fill the gaps. |
|
In the near term, though, less ice means commercial fishing fleets and the oil, gas, and mining industries can access a bounty of unexploited resources, environmentalists say. |
|
Outside, through the open door, ghostly fleets of bicycles glided past. |
|
For centuries you had enormous whale fleets armed with the most sophisticated technology of their time, manned by experts working morning, noon, and night to kill more whales. |
|
Sam explained that the 3,000 acres of the Nature Reserve is the largest in the English lowlands, the main area being grazing marsh divided by a network of ditches and fleets. |
|
Meanwhile, school buses, trucking fleets, and delivery vehicles are being converted to run on compressed natural gas. |
|
It is estimated that 25,000 jobs could be at risk if the problems of Scotland's fishing fleets and of processors and transporters are not tackled. |
|
Indeed a number of councils have considered operating their own vehicle fleets in order to undermine the market strength of the powerful bus groups. |
|
Most countries retain fleets of small, fast vessels for coastal patrol. |
|
In the United States today, common carrier and private trucking fleets transport about two-thirds of all freight tonnage and, thus, play a critical role in the economy. |
|
The beauty of this is that Italy cannot stab Russia effectively, not being able to bring fleets to bear against the southern conquests of the Russian empire. |
|
Whenever the Brazilian fleets arrive on the Tagus, British navy vessels and merchantmen already lie in wait, a continual irritant to Portuguese port authorities. |
|
The cannonade from the fleets was so violent that people along the west coast of Jutland were prevented from sleeping during the whole night, and foregathered on the beach. |
|
Ten thousand or so civilians worked at the dockyard to repair and supply the fleet, and went to and from their work in fleets of buses and special trains. |
|
In 1421, the Ming emperor Zhu Di dispatched four great fleets under admirals Hong Bao, Zhou Man, Zhou Wen, and Yang Qing to Southeast Asia and the Indian Ocean. |
|
Mansfield, who was brought up sailing keelboats out of the Royal Cork Yacht Club at Crosshaven, seems to do better when he is battling in bigger fleets. |
|
Military and police have complained they are underfunded and had to resort to cannibalizing parts from other aircraft to keep their aging fleets in the air. |
|
|
The company can deliver complete fleets of airworthy aircraft or helicopters coming from active duty or overhauled as per the manufacturer's recommendations. |
|
They reconnoitred for surface fleets, and helped to guard Russian convoys. |
|
They provided an added advantage to Lynn as a site attracting trade, since the fleets offered a sheltered anchorage for ships carrying visiting merchants. |
|
It would seem reasonable for an Anglo-French alliance to agree that no fleets will be built in Brest and Liverpool without the other's prior agreement. |
|
Most try to lease or rent their fleets to cut risk and expense. |
|
Instead of aerial armadas and huge tank fleets on the ground, the military response will also be low-key and downbeat but no less effective for having such a low profile. |
|
We are now able to build a picture very quickly of the service we are providing, spot any problems, and provide an easily auditable set of performance data for fleets. |
|
There is not an inexhaustible supply of experienced pilots to operate these fleets. |
|
In addition to the call for expert technicians, there is also the need, especially among fleets, for any repair or replacement to be completed as soon as possible. |
|
Besides the permanent three fleets, the Navy continues to organize the ad hoc India armadas, dispatched to India on an annual basis. |
|
The Ottoman fleets at Suez were instrumental in disputing control with the Portuguese over Indian Ocean trade. |
|
The term was also used by commercial fleets, when the distinction between a nation's navy and merchant fleet was not clear. |
|
Most fishing fleets are located in Frontera, with others in Sanchez Magallanes, Chilitepec and Dos Bocas. |
|
In 1598, an increasing number of fleets were sent out by competing merchant groups from around the Netherlands. |
|
Some fleets were lost, but most were successful, with some voyages producing high profits. |
|
Rijp is best known for his involvement with Barentsz in finding a route to the East, avoiding the Spanish and the Portuguese fleets in the South. |
|
The Battle of Lowestoft on 13 June saw combat between fleets of over a hundred ships on both sides. |
|
Naval superiority shifted between the opposing fleets as each built new, bigger ships. |
|
The Mughals also maintained various river fleets of Dhows, which transported soldiers over rivers and fought rebels. |
|
Siemens maintains the Class 185 and 350 fleets at Ardwick depot in Manchester with a smaller facility in York. |
|
|
What was formerly performed by fleets and armies, by invasions, sieges, and battles, has been of late accomplished by more silent methods. |
|
Purkeys has figured out how to save fleets time and money when it comes to their liftgate batteries. |
|
Most importantly, the Chinese, under Kublai's control, built many ships quickly in order to contribute to the fleets in both of the invasions. |
|
Both the thrusters and the cautionaries thought the war would end with a massive naval battle involving the battleships of both fleets. |
|
Once the two fleets had met, it was then likely, if not inevitable, that only some of the attacking fleet would make it through the enemy line. |
|
The fleets visited Arabia, East Africa, India, Maritime Southeast Asia and Thailand. |
|
Who could know what forces those two-meter hulls inshelled, or what fleets and empires waited on their signal? |
|
Medieval fleets, in England as elsewhere, were almost entirely composed of merchant ships enlisted into naval service in time of war. |
|
England's naval organisation was haphazard and the mobilisation of fleets when war broke out was slow. |
|
There are further details of the Royal Navy's historical organisation at List of fleets and major commands of the Royal Navy. |
|
Small numbers are also on exchange within other government departments and with allied fleets, such as the United States Navy. |
|
Only through the activities of her fleets did Elizabeth pursue an aggressive policy. |
|
She knighted Francis Drake after his circumnavigation of the globe from 1577 to 1580, and he won fame for his raids on Spanish ports and fleets. |
|
From there, the goods were transshipped across Mexico to the Spanish treasure fleets, for shipment to Spain. |
|
Raleigh and Elizabeth sought both immediate riches and a base for privateers to raid the Spanish treasure fleets. |
|
The French were reluctant to engage and the two fleets shadowed each other throughout 12 March. |
|
The fleets continued to shadow each other before making contact again, on 14 March, in the Battle of Genoa. |
|
Parker himself would wait in the Kattegat, covering Nelson's fleet in case of the arrival of the Swedish or Russian fleets. |
|
Longships were used extensively by the Leidang, the Scandinavian defence fleets. |
|
The First Punic War required that Rome build large fleets, and it did so largely with the assistance of and financing from allies. |
|
|
The details of command structure and fleet strengths during this period are not well known, although fleets were commanded by prefects. |
|
There is also information about the mustering of fleets in the eleventh Century. |
|
From 992 to 1066 fleets were assembled at London, or returned to the city at the end of their service, on several occasions. |
|
It was not until 229 BC when the Romans finally decisively beat the Illyrian fleets that their threat was ended. |
|
Pirate fleets exercised hegemony over villages on the coast, collecting revenue by exacting tribute and running extortion rackets. |
|
Meanwhile, American and British bomber fleets, based in Britain, began operations against Germany. |
|
In addition, the police and other agencies have been steadily replacing and modernising their fleets of vehicles. |
|
The RAF and Royal Navy's Westland Sea King fleets, after over 30 years of service, were retired. |
|
French and German Air Force pilots achieved only 180 and 150 flying hours across their fleets respectively. |
|
As the war progressed more air fleets were created as the areas under German rule expanded. |
|
By June 1853, both fleets were stationed at Besikas Bay, outside the Dardanelles. |
|
During the rest of the campaign the allied fleets remained in control of the Black Sea, ensuring the various fronts were kept supplied. |
|
Additionally, major airlines are seeking compensation from Airbus for revenue lost as a result of the cracks and subsequent grounding of fleets. |
|
The fleets of the County of Holland defeated the fleets of the Hanseatic League several times. |
|
Naval skirmishes continued until 17 April 1780, when British and French fleets clashed indecisively off Martinique. |
|
Every year the Dutch arrived in Japan with fleets of ships filled with Western goods for trade. |
|
With nationalisation in 1948 the LMS and LNER fleets were amalgamated under British Railways with the name Clyde Shipping Services. |
|
Most fleets have no nuclear submarines, due to the limited availability of nuclear power and submarine technology. |
|
Besides the established trawling fleets, a significant number of fleets using lobster creels have developed. |
|
At the end of the Middle Ages, early whaling fleets aimed at baleen whales, such as bowheads. |
|
|
Fisheries scientist Daniel Pauly and economist Ussif Rashid Sumaila have examined subsidies paid to bottom trawl fleets around the world. |
|
Ships of the Hudson's Bay Company were regular visitors, as were whaling fleets. |
|
Concurrently, Russia lost virtually its entire Pacific and Baltic fleets, and also much international esteem. |
|
Smaller fleets were deployed to the German overseas protectorates, the most prominent being assigned to the East Asia Station at Tsingtao. |
|
This led to the introduction of ships dedicated to keeping them away from the fleets, the torpedo boat destroyers, or simply destroyers. |
|
Numerous battles between the fleets were fought in the initial years, and Goeben and Russian units were damaged on several occasions. |
|
With heavy defensive and offensive mining on both sides, fleets played a limited role in the Eastern Front. |
|
Deployment would take twenty irreplaceable minutes, and the fleets were closing at full speed. |
|
They were relatively inexpensive and could be purchased in quantity, allowing mass attacks on fleets of larger ships. |
|
The combined EU fishing fleets land about 6 million tonnes of fish per year, of which about 3 million tonnes are from UK waters. |
|
The larger fish processing companies have their own fishing fleets and independent fisheries. |
|
They first planned to launch the invasion in April 1692, before the English and Dutch fleets put to sea and joined up. |
|
The fleets sighted each other at first light on 29 May 1692, off Cap Barfleur. |
|
Both fleets were in three squadrons, each split into three divisions and commanded by a flag officer. |
|
Owing to the calm conditions, it was not until after 11 am, five hours after first sighting each other, that the two fleets engaged. |
|
From around 11 am, and for the next few hours, both fleets bombarded each other, causing considerable damage. |
|
Meeting at the mouth of Quiberon Bay on 21 November, the two fleets closed in on each other. |
|
The main French fleets were at Brest in Brittany and at Toulon on the Mediterranean coast. |
|
The paddle steamer Waverley, built in 1947, is the last survivor of these fleets, and the last seagoing paddle steamer in the world. |
|
Fishing fleets from Russia, Japan, South Korea, and Taiwan also exploit the Indian Ocean, mainly for shrimp and tuna. |
|
|
Accusations of illegal overfishing by the French and Spanish fleets is a source of local friction. |
|
Being at the far west of Cornwall, Penzance and the surrounding villages have been sacked many times by foreign fleets. |
|
During the war the British had instituted a new system of blockade, by which they penned in the main French fleets at anchor in Brest and Toulon. |
|
It required a junction of the two French fleets in the English Channel, where they would be able to cover a major invasion. |
|
The elegant Brixham trawler spread across the world, influencing fishing fleets everywhere. |
|
Both men presented a report advocating the Table valley as a fort and garden for the East India fleets. |
|
Between 1525 and 1579, all return fleets were ordered to follow the outer route. |
|
Pisan and Genoese fleets fought the whole day in what became known as the Battle of Meloria. |
|
At the time, the Portuguese had not yet discovered that these stories were actually about Zheng He's fleets. |
|
Six more expeditions took place, from 1407 to 1433, with fleets of comparable size. |
|
Even though the Portuguese were successfully repelled from the city, fleets in the Indian Ocean were at their mercy. |
|
This federal tax disparity for LNG and propane is perhaps the largest disincentive to converting large fleets to alternative fuel vehicles. |
|
Our line of DURON heavy duty engine oils is specially formulated to keep your fleets moving and profitable. |
|
We're thrilled to work with EFS to bring such an innovative product to Canadian fleets. |
|
Another technology firm to win a recommendation from the paper is Minor Planet Systems, which makes systems for managing and tracking locations of vehicle fleets. |
|
Then, as if the clouds had discharged their aqueous cargo and rode light as unballasted ships, they lifted in aerial fleets and sailed away, white in a blue sky. |
|
Dyes from the New World such as cochineal and logwood were brought to Europe by the Spanish treasure fleets, and the dyestuffs of Europe were carried by colonists to America. |
|
Faced with the growing threat of piracy, in 1564 the Spanish adopted a convoy system far ahead of its time, with treasure fleets leaving America in April and August. |
|
The Aztec canoe fleets worked well for attacking the Spanish because they allowed the Aztecs to surround the Spanish on both sides of the causeway. |
|
He had a record of engaging and defeating much larger armies and fleets. |
|
|
These fleets will subsist until the beginning of the 19th century. |
|
Spain and France still had stronger fleets, but England was catching up. |
|
It is believed that both attempts were thwarted by bad weather or a flaw in the design of ships that were based on river boats without keels, and his fleets were destroyed. |
|
Zheng He's fleets visited Brunei, Java, Thailand and Southeast Asia, India, the Horn of Africa, and Arabia, dispensing and receiving goods along the way. |
|
Our goal is to develop a parallel circuit in the USA, and to see the European and American fleets meeting during several events, including the yearly World Championship. |
|
Innocent was aware of a plan to divert the Crusade to Constantinople and forbade any attack on the city, but the papal letter arrived after the fleets had left Zara. |
|
Discard dilemma When fishing fleets threw smaller amounts of discarded fish overboard, great skuas made up for lost meals by increasing attacks on other seabirds. |
|
Faria e Sousa includes not only the India Armadas, but all the Portuguese fleets from 1412, including those dispatched to Africa under Prince Henry the Navigator. |
|
The Spanish fleets became more effective in transporting greatly increased quantities of silver and gold from the Americas, while English attacks suffered costly failures. |
|
Many fleets also brought small supply ships on outward voyage. |
|
It was customary for return fleets to send their fastest ship ahead to announce the results in Lisbon, before the rest of the fleet arrived later that summer. |
|
From 1615, a new rule was introduced whereby return fleets from Goa were allowed to use the inner route, but return fleets from Cochin still had to use the outer route. |
|
The Spithead and Nore mutinies in 1797 incapacitated the Channel and North Sea fleets, leaving Britain potentially exposed to invasion, but were rapidly resolved. |
|
Armies, provinces, fleets, the whole system was interrelated. |
|
The E-Car Club, which has launched in London ahead of a nationwide roll-out, will allow businesses to reduce the cost and footprint of their fleets. |
|
The E-Car Club, which has launched in London ahead of a nationwide rollout, will allow businesses to reduce the cost and footprint of their fleets. |
|
Effectivity filtering also helps pilots find specific information related to the fleets and models of the aircraft they fly faster than when using paper-based manuals. |
|
Airships are posited to be cheaper to operate over time than fixed-wing aircraft, but as there are no large fleets, this is hard to prove in practice. |
|
The Suiones own fleets of rowing vessels with prows at both ends. |
|
The English were to meet the French and Breton fleets in the English Channel while the Spanish attacked them in the Bay of Biscay and then attack Gascony. |
|
|
By performing preventative maintenance at the specified intervals, fleets can significantly reduce unscheduled maintenance and potential vehicle breakdowns. |
|
Athens owned one of the largest war fleets in ancient Greece. |
|
The disparity in losses has been attributed by some historians less to Nelson's daring tactics than to the difference in fighting readiness of the two fleets. |
|
The two fleets would be within range of each other within an hour. |
|
A flat calm descended at 4 pm, leaving both fleets in a fog. |
|
Owners of large oil tanker fleets include Teekay Corporation, A P Moller Maersk, DS Torm, Frontline, MOL Tankship Management, Overseas Shipholding Group, and Euronav. |
|
Other nations had smaller fleets, generally with a lower proportion of battleships and a larger proportion of smaller ships like destroyers and submarines. |
|
During the 9th century peak of the Viking expansion, large fleets set out to attack the degrading Frankish empire by attacking up navigable rivers such as the Seine. |
|
By 830, the groups consisted of large fleets of Viking ships. |
|
Because of the lawless nature of the area, English, Danish, Dutch, and French companies and authorities tried to use force to keep out other countries' fleets. |
|
By 1979, the minke was the only whale caught by Southern Ocean fleets. |
|
At the same time, if you, a manufacturer, continue building fleets of nonhybrid gas guzzlers, you are condemning yourself, your employees and shareholders to oblivion. |
|
The mainstay of China's merchant and naval fleets was the junk, which had existed for centuries, but it was at this time that the large ships based on this design were built. |
|
The French planned to invade the British Isles during 1759 by accumulating troops near the mouth of the Loire and concentrating their Brest and Toulon fleets. |
|
The only consolation for the British was that the large merchant fleets of occupied countries like Norway and the Netherlands came under British control. |
|
In the late 16th century, English ships cruised in the Caribbean and off the coast of Spain, trying to intercept treasure fleets from the Spanish Main. |
|
During the Qing period, Chinese pirate fleets grew increasingly large. |
|
That prominent generals commanded both armies and fleets suggests that naval forces were treated as auxiliaries to the army and not as an independent service. |
|
Jervis decided to give battle and the two fleets met on 14 February. |
|
Spain still had numerically larger fleets, but England was catching up. |
|
|
The queen's charter also said that Raleigh was supposed to establish a base from which to send privateers on raids against the treasure fleets of Spain. |
|
This list ranks companies based on revenues from all customized communications sources and includes operators of teleports, satellite fleets and fiber networks. |
|
Private truck fleets are using the data available through telematics to understand fuel consumption, the effects of new engine emissions standards, and driver behavior. |
|
On the other hand, the high cost of telematics hardware restrains the penetration of telematics in commercial vehicles, especially in small and medium fleets. |
|