Local materials were used to make the stains, including walnut bark, walnut hulls, and butternut hulls. |
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Fabulous sea creatures, giant fish, mermaids and dolphins circulate through the hulls of wrecked ships. |
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Spread a mulch of wood chips, cocoa bean hulls, or the like around the plant, taking care not to heap the material around the rose's trunk. |
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The hulls are constructed of a fiberglass composite with a core throughout. |
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The submarine has two separate pressure hulls with a diameter of 7.2 m each, five inner habitable hulls and 19 compartments. |
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Fibrous feeds such as beet pulp, chopped alfalfa hay, rice hulls and wheat middlings elevate fiber content of a complete feed. |
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There was a nagging doubt, however, about the seaworthiness of these untested hulls. |
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People sitting in the big top were in trances, distracted by the cracking of peanut hulls and dazzled by spangled spandex wardrobes. |
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Nine steel bollards, usually used to support the hulls of ships, blockade the yard's entrance. |
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The implement slices the tops off the grain hulls and then squeezes the pulp and kernels from the cob while leaving the hulls attached. |
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The seeds would then be sun dried or parched over a slow fire to crack open the hulls to then be threshed by trampling. |
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Cold, aching, and exhausted I swam in past the unscalable hulls of the ships toward the stone wall of the quay. |
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Indeed ships used to navigate by the sounds of turtles hitting their hulls and that's how they knew they were getting close to land at night. |
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Once it takes hold it encrusts boat hulls and propellers, and chokes pipes and aquaculture. |
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Then came metal hulls and steam power, and the historical line of continuity was broken. |
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The models have flat-bottomed hulls and had previously been supported on brass upstands and housed in a variety of conventional display cases. |
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To make the calcium in sesame seeds digestible, you need to break open the hulls with a coffee grinder. |
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She has had Bowmar hatches fitted to the coachroofs making the hulls much lighter inside. |
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The suspended hulls, which are conceived as a pendant to the vases, seem to confirm the artist's preoccupation with history. |
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The pressure hulls are arranged parallel to each other and symmetrical to a centerplane. |
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Rinse the berries and tip them into a dish, removing the strawberry hulls and currant stalks as you go. |
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Another two ships were dry-docked at the end of slipways while a few cold-looking workers labored at scraping down the hulls. |
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They slashed trailer tyres, drilled holes through the hulls of boats and ruined the expensive protective covers. |
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Dietary fiber is the complex carbohydrate found in grain, hulls, and plant forage material and is not efficiently digested by swine. |
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Another source shows that both the outer hulls and inner skins are tinged various shades of pink and purple. |
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Sunflower seed hulls, roasted and ground, were used by Native Americans and pioneers as a coffee substitute. |
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An abundant 24 kDa protein has been purified and identified from soybean seed hulls. |
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Early tests show these pellets to be more digestible than those already made from cotton seed hulls. |
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Without the gravity well for acceleration, the damage would be absorbed by the outer hulls. |
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The conclusions of Moore and Hatfield are based on data from forages rather than from grain hulls. |
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Dry soybeans are prone to have cracked seed hulls, which reduces germination. |
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Then we searched the enclosure with a Geiger counter to locate scatter-hoarded seeds and hulls of eaten seeds. |
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Apply a 2-to 3-inch layer of mulch, such as pine needles, shredded bark, or seed hulls, after the plants resume active growth. |
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The product used as filling for these pillows of buckwheat is actually the hulls or husks that protect the kernels. |
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He created a re-circulating system to clean the grain and sold the hulls as bedding and a low-potassium roughage source. |
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The design and engineering of the hulls, decks, interior furnishing and machinery are carefully evaluated to ensure overall quality. |
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Several models present divergent solutions to the same problem, for example the repair of hulls below the waterline. |
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Evan came with us to the dockside, having previously checked which of the great hulls looming against the skyline was the Dover ferry. |
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The beams pulled them in closer until a dull thud sounded throughout the thick hulls of the salvage vessels. |
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The wheels extend below the deployed outboard hulls to assist in kedging by reducing friction, suction, and risk of hull damage. |
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Originally the hulls were baked at 60 degrees and so, as we sailed through the Tropics, we effectively rebaked it causing stress. |
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The Americans were developing larger tanks, with cast-armour hulls and turrets, better guns, and air-cooled diesel engines. |
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An air cushion between the two hulls is created as the catamaran moves through the water. |
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By the same token the hulls come to embody notions of flight, diaspora, immigration and emigration. |
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The material, which is used to make everything from boat hulls to bathtubs, is a perfect application for automotive outer panels, he says. |
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Boat owners can get into serious trouble for leaving it stuck to propellers or hulls when boats are in transit. |
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Each night the boats are dehumidified in their sheds to dry out water absorbed by the hulls. |
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While larvae can settle around docks or boat hulls, their preferred habitat is an oyster shell on an oyster reef. |
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The hulls were ripped off the towed sub during a fierce storm and the submarine sank in 170 metres of water. |
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Stucky speculates that a synthetic material based on the worm's teeth might one day serve as an antifouling coating for ships' hulls. |
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Their sleek build enabled them to sail under large vessels so that frogmen could plant limpet mines on their hulls. |
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Taking herbal remedies such as alfalfa, garlic, aloe vera, dandelion, red clover and psyllium hulls is one method. |
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Not when you were carried to the orlop deck full of king-sized splinters from cannonballs smashing through wooden hulls, I imagine. |
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Some examples of these include cottonseed, buckwheat, corncobs, grape pomace, pine straw, and pecan, walnut, and rice hulls. |
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Most of the copper produced was used for sheathing wooden hulls of sailing ships in the 18th and 19th centuries. |
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The hulls lie in relatively shallow water and have long been raided by salvagers and souvenir hunters, despite their status as war graves. |
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The vessels are of catamaran design, the hulls being constructed from a fibre-reinforced plastic sandwich. |
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The team hopes the magnetometer will identify the wreck site by detecting the iron used in the hulls and steam engines of the sunken ships. |
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A production plant under construction in Jennings, La., will produce ethanol from rice hulls and bagasse. |
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Explosive shells caused such extensive damage to a wooden hull that first armor plating and eventually steel hulls were adopted. |
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The hulls and decks are built with hand-laid layers of fiberglass cloth for a uniform structure with high strength and durability. |
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These had rounded hulls and strakes gathered into the upper end of the latter and not, as in a cog, ending at the stem and stern posts. |
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Gaettok is a pie-shaped cake made of the hulls of grain, such as rice, barley and millet. |
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As another continuing farm project, Mark uses worms to compost cow manure and coffee hulls. |
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In many areas of the Southeast U.S., cottonseed hulls are often the primary source of roughage or are used to extend conventional forage supplies. |
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Streets are still littered with the blackened hulls of burned cars. |
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With her three pearl white parallel hulls she had a 25-foot beam. |
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The wooden hulls of the canoes would have bobbed on the desert of water, lapped by waves repeating and repeating the vastness of the earth in soft undulations. |
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They were armed with a ram, relied on oars for propulsion and their deep v-shaped lower hulls had a significant advantage in speed and manoeuvrability. |
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Some of the prisoners did find time to make musical instruments such as violins from the dismantled hulls of sunken boats and hard wood salvaged from collapsed buildings. |
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On his office wall here, along with some breathtaking drawings of yacht hulls, is a black-and-white photograph of a small yacht being pounded by gigantic seas. |
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In one design, two or more horses walked in a circle on deck, turning a capstan amidships that was geared to a paddle wheel set between a pair of catamaran-like hulls. |
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This semi-displacement hull form is well suited to fishermen and lobstermen who must get their nets and pots onboard without hanging up on the hard chine of planing hulls. |
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As it is sometimes difficult to rear young calves it is a good thing to keep them clean and dry, whitewashing the calf hulls two or three times during the winter. |
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The introduction of heavy guns for naval warfare and the need to transport larger cargoes faster led to stouter hulls and more masts for more sails. |
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They were able to swim down and then out of the hull to join eight other tourists and the yacht's master on the deck linking the hulls of the upturned craft. |
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Yale researchers say a chemical used to protect marine vessels against barnacles clinging to their hulls may be doing damage to the hearing of whales and other mammals. |
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The special port facilities, which could be drained to allow repairs on ships' hulls, have been closed and the heavy machinery dismantled and moved to Liverpool. |
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Nampo personnel landing craft are based on Soviet P-6 torpedo boat hulls. |
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We have also published articles about structurally unsound boat hulls, boat buying scams and faulty generators that create the risk of carbon monoxide poisoning. |
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By the third movement, the violins and violas are passing like ships in the night, the double bass thudding against their hulls as if to mark their dimensional presence. |
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He then sailed north to Paracoa Bay where he built a palisade to protect his caravels before he careened them in order to repair their poorly maintained hulls. |
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In addition to remarkable administrative and strategic abilities, Middleton was also instrumental in getting the Royal Navy to adopt carronades and coppered hulls. |
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Two outrigger hulls provide stability and prevent the boat from capsizing. |
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The boats are bancas, canoe-style hulls with twin bamboo outriggers. |
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Not all dyes need mordants to help them adhere to fabric. If they need no mordants, such as lichens and walnut hulls, they are called substantive dyes. |
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When crossing the Atlantic, he charted the location of the Gulf Stream and designed new hulls, riggings, propellers, and pumps for sailing vessels. |
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She carried this one even further and tried, where possible, to use agro-based materials made from crop residues such as wheat straws and sunflower seed hulls. |
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It also has a sharp edge so the user may cut the grain hulls from the cob. |
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Fill with hulled sunflowers seeds to avoid the mess of seed hulls. |
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Lay a tarp under the feeder to catch seed hulls and dropped seed. |
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Total RNA was extracted from leaves, tillers, young panicles, leaf sheaths, hulls, and anthers of rice using the hot phenol method as previously described. |
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Duplicate subsamples of 50 g from each barley sample were added to the pearling machine for 15 s, and the pearled grain and hulls were collected in separate compartments. |
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You can buy pumpkin seeds raw and either with or without their hulls. |
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They had their foremasts removed and their hulls reinforced with massive oak timbers to accommodate one or two powerful sea mortars of either 10-inch or 13-inch caliber. |
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Aluminum is used in hulls, deckhouses, and hatch covers of commercial ships, as well as in equipment items, such as ladders, railings, gratings, windows, and doors. |
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Walnut hulls contain polyphenols that stain hands and can cause skin irritation. |
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Multiple ballonets located fore and aft in each of the hulls provide pressure control. |
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For example, each of the sub-hulls generates its own wave train, and the wave trains interact in the space between hulls. |
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Having failed to find the great markets and cities of China or India, he was returning with empty hulls. |
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For example, in California cattle are commonly fed almond hulls and cotton seed. |
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Internal injuries stemming from being trapped between hulls and docks and impacts have also been fatal. |
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Because of the anoxic water at depth, organic matter, including anthropogenic artifacts such as boat hulls, are well preserved. |
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In winter special icebreaker boats with reinforced hulls would be used to break the ice. |
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The ships were beginning to show wear from the long voyage, and some were kept together by having their hulls bundled up with cables. |
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This also enabled them to maintain a position to windward so that the heeling Armada hulls were exposed to damage below the water line. |
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The hulls were generally wooden, although iron, steel and composite hulls gradually overtook them. |
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These ships have hulls of glass fibre or wood instead of steel to avoid magnetic signatures. |
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When they occur out of their localities, hypothesizing a transport mechanism is usually possible, such as the hulls of ships. |
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In New Zealand, the Pacific oyster was unintentionally introduced in 1950s, most likely through ballast water and from the hulls of ships. |
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Who could know what forces those two-meter hulls inshelled, or what fleets and empires waited on their signal? |
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The steel hulls of ice-breakers are much thicker than those of standard vessels. |
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Double hulls are being considered for future submarines in the United States to improve payload capacity, stealth and range. |
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For more than two centuries, copper paint has been used on boat hulls to control the growth of plants and shellfish. |
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Using crushed walnut hulls or ground corncob media, the grungiest brass comes out slick and spanky-clean. |
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Ship builders paint Plimsoll lines on ship hulls to show when the load is too great. |
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Rice milling involves the removal of hulls and bran from rough rice to produce polished rice. |
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This approach allows the construction of mini-airships with shapes that are difficult to implement with nonrigid or semirigid hulls. |
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There have been many attempts to understand the principles of high air pressure below hulls and wings. |
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The trimaran concept is based on a long, slender main hull with two shorter side hulls, or amahs, that provide stability. |
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During hearings to ban hull splashing, or the copying of hulls, Representative Howard Coble of North Carolina suggested that all hulls be registered with the Copyright office. |
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Since 1991, Quark Expeditions has specialized in expedition cruising to the Arctic and Antarctica, in ships with ice-strengthened hulls or in icebreakers. |
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As well as intentional introductions, the Pacific oyster has spread through accidental introductions either through larvae in ballast water or on the hulls of ships. |
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Niobium is used as an additive in the production of high strength, low alloy steel for products such as pipelines, car bodies, tool steels, steel hulls and rails. |
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Cottonseed hulls can be added to dairy cattle rations for roughage. |
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To exceed that limit, a few submarines were built with titanium hulls. |
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The hotel nightlights shine behind the drawn venetian blinds and the slatted patterns on the curbside cars give them the look of anchored smallcraft with lapstrake hulls. |
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Oakum was used for the caulking of the hulls of wooden ships. |
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Boat building, one of the oldest branches of engineering, is concerned with constructing the hulls of boats and, for sailboats, the masts, spars and rigging. |
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At the same time medieval ships were developing deeper hulls. |
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Built in association with John Scott Russell, it used longitudinal stringers for strength, inner and outer hulls, and bulkheads to form multiple watertight compartments. |
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His chief claim to fame, industrially speaking, was in patenting the alloy known as Muntz Metal, which was used for the protective sheathing of ships' hulls. |
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One of the most common dinghy hulls in the world is the Laser hull. |
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By mimicking the skin of a long-finned pilot whale American scientists are designing a method to keep ships' hulls free of barnacles and other drag-inducing marine life. |
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The hard usage they were subjected to and inherent flexibility of their shallow wooden hulls meant that relatively few of them had careers longer than a decade. |
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The growth of the biofouling community on ships' hulls causes economic losses due to the increased fuel consumption required to keep the cruising speed. |
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The LNG will be shipped to the Pacific and Europe through the Northern Sea Route in tankers with hulls specially re-inforced for sailing through Arctic ice. |
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They are built with hulls that produce a minimal pressure signature. |
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To ensure profitability, the owners of the ships divided their hulls into holds with little headroom, so they could transport as many slaves as possible. |
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Their weapons were limpet mines, to be attached to the ships' hulls. |
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He points out that both 2014 Quadski models have larger sponsons integrated into their hulls to provide added stability and help improve overall marine handling. |
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