The idea of adding the EU's emblem to the red ensign was rejected in a vote in Strasbourg on tighter controls on maritime safety. |
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The sextant, a navigational tool used to indicate latitude, was lent to the museum by a local maritime historian. |
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The loan will provide funds for maritime simulators, laboratory equipment, teaching materials and consultancy services. |
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It is the country's worst maritime disaster and ranks as one of the world's worst ferry accidents of all time. |
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Topsham is a real find, with both historical and maritime interest and a friendly, laid-back atmosphere. |
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It provides a perceptive insight into one of the great maritime mysteries of modern times. |
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At a maritime industry meeting in Southern California, the FBI warned of increased terrorist chatter. |
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When fitted with floats, the planes flew maritime reconnaissance patrols and performed their missions in an efficient and reliable manner. |
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The maritime supremacy of the Norse, however, was destroyed and surpassed by the cities that belonged to the Hanseatic League. |
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The lichen samples were collected along a transect from the northern maritime Antarctic to the continent. |
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A messy maritime incident that's getting worse, a cargo ship ran aground in the Aleutians. |
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This was one of the most ambitious threats from Norway and was aiming to establish maritime control over the western seaways. |
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Turning to trees, you'll see holm oaks and durmast oaks, chestnut trees, beeches, the occasional poplar, and maritime pines. |
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He regarded most of the new people as noisy, assertive, and ignorant of maritime knowledge, traditions and courtesy. |
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He received his award for service to the preservation and documentation of Australia's naval history and maritime heritage. |
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Between 1936 and 1969 maritime air operations in Britain were under the control of Coastal Command units. |
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Initial research, he says, suggests the crops are ideally suited to Pembrokeshire's maritime climate. |
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The report sums up the first full investigation into concerns which a number of maritime organisations felt had been ignored. |
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Running through the streets of the maritime city, the local coppers eyed us as we hunted for our getaway driver. |
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The Federal Government was acting in contravention of maritime law by shunning a ship and crew in distress. |
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This omnibus of three classic studies provides a basic grounding for scholars of India's maritime history. |
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The UK is reliant on maritime trade and if it gets disrupted then it's going to have an impact on us. |
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Three maritime workers in Queensland face disciplinary action and may be sacked by their ship towage employer for attending the rally. |
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Tokyo is of course a maritime city and a great port, but people who visit do not always fully appreciate this. |
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In 1588 the world's most powerful empire launched a fleet of ships against a small maritime nation. |
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The heartland stood in opposition to the maritime or oceanic lands, and would triumph. |
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In the colder reaches of the Arctic and in Talkeetna, which enjoys a cooler maritime climate, there was very little change. |
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The area's mild, rainy, maritime climate is in sharp contrast to the dry, sunny lands of southern Spain. |
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He says too many boaties have below par maritime skills, and that can lead to trouble when conditions change rapidly on the water. |
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The preserved hull and associated museum will continue to hold a fascination for maritime and terrestrial archaeologists. |
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The maritime climate ensures that there are very few winter frosts, allowing the cultivation of many tender and unusual plants. |
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The Australian Government and indeed the public have just become aware of the worst maritime disaster ever seen in our neck of the woods. |
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Caesar records that the Belgae raided maritime areas of Britain and that some eventually settled there. |
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Research into naval and maritime issues has just got easier with the opening of the Naval Reference Collection at Campbell Park. |
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They will then make their way to the Peoples' Park for maritime madness and mayhem. |
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At Lily Fen, the maritime climate results in a high water table and consequent differentiation of microhabitats. |
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An acceptable balance of interests between maritime states and coastal states appears to have been achieved. |
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The climate, both tropical and maritime in nature, usually has high humidity and high temperatures. |
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This antioxidant flavonoid is an extract from the bark of the French maritime pine tree. |
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The area has also been key to Britain's maritime trade with both ship-building and freight playing a major role in the regions development. |
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This month I launched a new maritime rule requiring all recreational boaties to have a suitable life jacket for every person on board. |
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It was this maritime vulnerability that made naval politics the most important of all politics. |
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The bill establishes a maritime security framework that is vital to the security of our ports and maritime shipping. |
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The change which has taken place in relation to matters maritime is also of similar magnitude. |
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Exploration, however, depended upon private patronage despite theorists imploring that maritime expansionism should be state-sponsored. |
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Active Endeavour is the name given to the policing of maritime trade routes as part of the global war against terrorism. |
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Seattle's mild maritime climate means you can drink lattes with the locals at an outdoor cafe well into the holiday season. |
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Despite a fine maritime climate, more than 30 percent of the inhabitants have overt symptoms of asthma. |
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The Coast Guard screened maritime workers for loyalty, and blacklisted and drove hundreds off the ships and docks. |
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For eight centuries before that, the family a sept of Ui Fiachra were a great maritime power and ruled the seas along the Western Atlantic. |
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To conduct a maritime war in distant seas the Admiralty had to be able to transport naval stores to squadrons operating from remote stations. |
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Coast Guard maritime security cutters will not be frigates, but these categories of warship do bear more than a casual similarity. |
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The officer has been an ever-present at the maritime warfare training centre. |
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As they move eastward, moisture evaporates into the air, making the air mass more like a maritime tropical air mass. |
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This occurs when relatively moist maritime air is carried inland at levels above the surface. |
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Lemoine et al. found a decrease in concentrations of N, P and K in stemwood, from the top of the stem to a height of 2 m, for maritime pine. |
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The pilots have officially declared themselves open to offers by advertising their services in the international maritime press. |
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Global maritime commercial powers, of which Britain and America are both exemplars, tend to fight two types of war. |
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It was unusually cold for autumn, something quite unusual for the largely maritime tropical climate of the island, a bad omen. |
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The success of the long boat construction had paved the way for further historical maritime projects. |
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In this way the Newport fleet connects to an ancient maritime tradition of asking for safe passage and a bountiful catch. |
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The maritime borders between Australia and East Timor have never been defined. |
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The same 10 homologous linkage groups were identified between loblolly pine and maritime pine. |
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Additionally, the new inclusivity in labour historiography may have specific effects in gendered maritime history. |
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Plus, this team posted the country's best-ever showing at the World University Games, making them the darlings of the maritime sports scene. |
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Piracy has flourished on the high seas for as long as maritime commerce has existed between states. |
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Amsterdam, the flourishing center of international maritime trade, was an ideal location for a collector of natural curios. |
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Superiority in coastal areas or maritime blockade should be seen as prerequisites of success in an operation. |
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The great powers and maritime empires of the age of sail also had to ensure access to forested lands with good ship timber. |
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And the sea will also be off-limits, with French warships guarding a maritime exclusion zone around Omaha Beach near Arromanches. |
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The coastal maritime region is filled with mangrove swamps and alluvial plains that support palm trees. |
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Transition to a new mechanism of pursuance of maritime policy should be implemented in several stages. |
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The gallery's current maritime theme is appropriate in a village once renowned as the home of the sea captains. |
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After all, the majority of maritime accidents occur in congested sea lanes. |
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He defines sea power broadly to include maritime trade and ocean resources, and he analyzes the importance of sea lines of communication. |
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More recently, and largely as a result of English tutelage, it had acquired some reputation as a maritime power. |
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Technical experts on the delimitation and demarcation of the maritime boundary between Namibia and Angola finalised the treaty last year. |
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It was abundantly clear that maritime European powers now had good reason to look for a direct sea passage to the Indies. |
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Their spring 2005 Conservation Bulletin was devoted to maritime and coastal heritage. |
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The islands of the Scilly archipelago are steeped in both maritime and diving history. |
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Research has shown that ryegrasses grow throughout the year in a temperate maritime climate. |
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Responsibility in providing an emergency response to maritime casualty accidents within Irish territorial waters lies with the Irish Coastguard. |
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The South Island has a maritime climate and snow can fall at ground level in Fjordland in winter. |
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The archaic vessel that was found near Cherthala could have thrown light on the State's maritime history. |
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This species lives exclusively in or near sandy soils within coastal dune and scrub communities and maritime chaparral. |
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The hour-long ceremony alongside Southsea Naval War Memorial is intended to honour 9,000 maritime veterans of all nations. |
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The temperate maritime climate, with warm summers and cool, wet winters, becomes more extreme towards the south and east. |
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They were also a maritime power and ruled the waves around the western shores for a thousand years. |
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On the coast, the maritime villas that exploited the fishing resources of the lagoons and ponds still played a central role. |
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On an oceanfront or riverside, usually near a jetty or landing port, these hotels were features of the maritime age. |
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By the beginning of the twentieth century, the United States was also a maritime power, possessing a sizeable merchant fleet and navy. |
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Candidates also learn basic maritime operations, conduct hydro-graphic surveys and prepare hydrographic charts. |
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There are numerous maritime antiques, pictures and figureheads as well as ship models to be found throughout. |
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It even creates news products for maritime and land mobile markets across six continents and four ocean regions. |
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The fog cleared to reveal gleaming glaciers and maritime alps as we made a cautious sun-soothed entry into the sound itself. |
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And then, as now, it was essentially a debate between maritime forces and land forces. |
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There are also fears that the various newly created autonomies will fight over maritime boundaries and resources such as fish. |
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Adjoining the visitors shop is Hartlepool Museum, which is stuffed full of artefacts telling the story of the town, particularly its maritime heritage. |
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The Lynx is one of the mainstays of maritime aviation for the Royal Navy, and the aircraft has for many years provided the ship's flight for deployed frigates and destroyers. |
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We have to make the best of our maritime resources in all aspects. |
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The state secretary for maritime affairs stationed naval ships at the 12-mile borderline to ensure that the vessel didn't enter his country's waters. |
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And once again the professionalism of Australian maritime workers response teams has been crucial in the emergency towage operation to free the vessel from the Reef. |
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Australia must therefore not frustrate East Timor's rightful claim to its maritime boundaries and its rightful share of the oil and gas fields of the Timor Sea. |
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The outbreaks of polar air to middle latitudes are normally balanced by intrusions of mild maritime air from middle latitudes into the Arctic and polar regions. |
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The captains of the capsized South Korean ferry and the Costa Concordia have set a new bar for maritime cowardice. |
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More than 30 old New England trade shops and businesses line the streets, many of which are home to maritime trades such as shipsmith and coopers to woodcarvers and riggers. |
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It's a theme restaurant and the theme is maritime disasters. |
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In a bid to remain in the top position, the MPA says it will continue to develop its facilities, as well as offer quality maritime services such as bunkering and towage. |
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Major evolutions such as this afford the navy an opportunity unlike most others by improving interoperability with other nations' maritime forces. |
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Based on maritime law hundreds of year old, salvage was established to encourage ship owners to abandon their schedules and help those in trouble. |
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The collection also features world maps, and includes atlases, globes, school geographies, maritime charts, and a variety of pocket, wall, children's, and manuscript maps. |
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The two countries have long been at loggerheads over their maritime boundary, a dispute that centres on the ownership of Mbana Island, in the Gulf of Guinea. |
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The company has co-ordinated over 3000 events of all sizes and varieties and its maritime division has been involved in a number of major maritime events. |
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So the very purpose of proceedings within the admiralty jurisdiction is in respect of a general maritime cause which includes the provision of security. |
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The maintenance of a balance of power on the continent and friendly relations with the other maritime nation, England, were considered priorities. |
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Schettino is on trial for multiple manslaughter, causing a maritime disaster and abandoning ship. |
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The great majority of cases, however, are in personam, and thus in fact state courts and federal courts have concurrent jurisdiction over most maritime actions. |
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In the west, the fiordlands and alpine terrain of British Columbia attest to vigorous glaciation of high-relief mountains in a snowy, maritime climate. |
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It really doesn't get down to Scandinavian lows here, but the humidity caused by our maritime climate makes a zero degrees day feel utterly bitter. |
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The two ships sailed from Britain at the end of the summer, expecting to complete a maritime deployment which would bring them home in time for Christmas. |
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All the three great maritime powers were ranged against Britain. |
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Athens parlayed its fleet into a maritime empire, blockading and starving any subjects that defied her will. |
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The Indonesians were a powerful maritime nation in the 1st millennium. |
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His shipping fleet has been at the centre of a dispute with the Australian maritime unions over the flagging out of two bulk carriers working the domestic coastal trade. |
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Nevertheless, they are still dithering, and proposing what their last year's defence policy called 'An air-capable maritime platform', a kind of Clayton's aircraft carrier. |
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The first blocks to be explored are just a few miles away from Britain's proven Foinaven and Shiehallion fields, across a maritime border agreed by treaty two years ago. |
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The sergeant grew up at Robin Hood's Bay before joining the merchant navy and sailing to West Africa, where a bout of blackwater fever put an end to his maritime career. |
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The Treaty brought about a compromise in the dispute over maritime borders between the two countries and allowed the development of oil and gas resources to progress. |
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It concentrates on town planning and the construction of new port facilities that greatly enhanced the city's stature as a center of maritime trade. |
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The Norsemen, for example, had by AD 1100 established the first Atlantic maritime empire that linked Scandinavia to Iceland, Greenland, and North America. |
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European maritime powers paid the tribute demanded by the rulers of the privateering states of North Africa to prevent attacks on their shipping by corsairs. |
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Poised on the edge of the Atlantic Ocean, Lisbon, which was a great maritime power in the 15th century, enjoys a melange of cultures few cities can match. |
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It needs to understand that nearly the entire income of the federal government in the early decades of the republic derived from tariffs on maritime trade. |
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Nonetheless, I consider this book as a major contribution to Melanesian ethnography and maritime anthropology and recommend it highly to anyone interested in these fields. |
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New Bedford began as a farming settlement and then sequentially became involved in maritime industries, factory production, and light manufacturing. |
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The climate is maritime along the coast and continental in other areas. |
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Once the unfortunate Afghans forced the skipper of the Tampa to sail to a port not of his choosing, it became a maritime hijack, analogous to a plane hijack. |
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Situated at the location where the Vikings landed one thousand years ago, its design has a strong maritime theme, including a sail-like tensile canopy. |
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Each spring, waves of warblers, sparrows and a variety of shorebirds settle on the barrier island's seven miles of deserted beach and vast maritime forests. |
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By changing hemispheres every six months they made the most of the darkness while the maritime climates of the two cities made the temperatures bearable. |
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With regard to the environmental condition, many of the examined samples contain a preponderance of ferns and lycopod types, indicative of a maritime climate. |
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When finished, Titanic Quarter hopes to include offices, shops, a maritime museum and, beside the old slipway, a building that will tell the Titanic story. |
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Thus, we start in the polar ice and tundra, move on to grasslands, thence to rain forests and marshes, then uplands, seaboards and maritime civilisations. |
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The maritime industries in all their variety, from building five-masted schooners to rowboats and all the related supporting trades, are represented. |
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The aim of this study was to investigate the influence of aerial architecture on the dynamic characteristics of young maritime pines using a mechanistic approach. |
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This will make the South China Sea into its inland lake with power to regulate and control all shipping lanes, maritime trade and naval movements. |
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Today, there are few, if any, maritime roles that remain exclusively male. |
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The inspiration for the poem came initially from seeing a sailmaker's palm in the maritime museum in Greenock when I was over there visiting a writer's workshop. |
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The air and maritime transport markets in Poland are largely well developed. |
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Britain's Royal Navy controlled most of the key maritime trade routes and enjoyed unchallenged sea power. |
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Cote d'lvoire's Abidjan port is the country's maritime gateway and a vital asset for many of West Africa's land-locked countries. |
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In 2008, VSOS became the first authorized armed maritime security company to operate in the Indian Ocean region. |
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Their strength and ferocity coincided with the impending trade growth of the maritime silk and spice routes. |
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Until about 1440, maritime trade in both the North Sea and the Baltic Sea was seriously in danger of attack by the pirates. |
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Dennis O'Connor for the National Coastguard SOS Campaign group said understaffing at any maritime rescue coordination centre was unacceptable. |
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The findings, announced Wednesday, take archeology deeper than ever before, promising a new era of discoveries in maritime history. |
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Like most of Scotland, Edinburgh has a temperate, maritime climate which is relatively mild despite its northerly latitude. |
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Foreign traders were starting to use new routes such as Malacca and Sunda Strait due to the development of maritime Southeast Asia. |
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Island countries have often been the basis of maritime conquest and historical rivalry between other countries. |
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Since the fishing industry is an important part of country's economy, maritime schools are an important part of Faroese education. |
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This change resulted in the decline of Funan, while new maritime powers such as Srivijaya, Tarumanagara, and Medang emerged. |
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Srivijaya especially became the dominant maritime power for more than 5 centuries, controlling both Strait of Malacca and Sunda Strait. |
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The Republic's role as a maritime power in the region secured many favorable commercial treaties for Genoese merchants. |
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Lithuania's climate, which ranges between maritime and continental, is relatively mild. |
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The maritime section of Southeast Asia is also known as Malay Archipelago, a term derived from the European concept of a Malay race. |
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Shanties had antecedents in the working chants of British and other national maritime traditions. |
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In the maritime history of Europe, the carrack and caravel both incorporated the lateen sail that made ships far more maneuverable. |
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Because of Bristol's nautical environment, maritime safety was an important issue in the city. |
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Theravada Buddhism entered the region during the 3rd century, via maritime trade routes between the region and Sri Lanka. |
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It also participates in other maritime investigations where British citizens are involved. |
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As with the rest of the British Isles and the Midlands, Coventry experiences a maritime climate with cool summers and mild winters. |
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Some people find that extract of maritime pine bark helps control allergies. |
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Due to its long coastline, various maritime sports are popular in Cornwall, notably sailing and surfing. |
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In 2012, the two countries resolved their maritime boundary disputes at the International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea. |
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Cucumber left for half a day, with red peppers and soy sauce and a tidge of sea salt comes through fierce and maritime as a Yangtse pirate. |
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Ramsgate Maritime Museum near the harbour quayside has exhibits showing the evolution of Ramsgate Harbour and east Kent maritime history. |
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By the 5th century CE, trade networking between East and West was concentrated in the maritime route. |
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Despite Mycenae and Troy being maritime powers, the Iliad features no sea battles. |
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Then it was over the massive two-mile bridge to Ile de Re, with its long sandy beaches, maritime pine forests and small villages. |
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It is separated from Tajikistan by Afghanistan's narrow Wakhan Corridor in the north, and also shares a maritime border with Oman. |
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During his maritime missions, on several occasions Zheng's fleet came into conflict with pirates. |
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The Chola dynasty of medieval India was a dominant seapower in the Indian Ocean, an avid maritime trader and diplomatic entity with Song China. |
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During summer nights and winters those differences are lower due to the same maritime mechanisms. |
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With a powerful navy, China dominated maritime trade throughout South East Asia as well. |
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However, Chinese naval maritime influence would penetrate into the Indian Ocean until the medieval period. |
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The South Island has 15 named maritime fiords which are all located in the southwest of the island in a mountainous area known as Fiordland. |
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Bristol's economy has been built on maritime trade, including the import of tobacco and the slave trade. |
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It also illustrated England's drive to control the seas, which would ultimately allow it to become the prime maritime power of the world. |
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The discoveries of Christopher Columbus electrified all of western Europe, especially maritime powers like England. |
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Over 3,000 people were lost when the converted troopship Lancastria was sunk in June 1940, the greatest maritime disaster in Britain's history. |
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Thus, STORMWINDS aims to advance maritime risk analysis and management, taking an interdisciplinary approach to improve maritime safety. |
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Without any significant maritime enemies, the Roman navy was reduced mostly to patrolling for pirates and transportation duties. |
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A single mine inserted strategically on a shipping route can stop maritime movements for days while the entire area is swept. |
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The northernmost part has a mostly maritime Subarctic climate, while Svalbard has an Arctic tundra climate. |
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This results when cold polar maritime air that has travelled over a large expanse of warmer ocean is forced to rise over high country. |
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The maritime climate means that the Lake District experiences relatively moderate temperature variations through the year. |
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After the defeat of the Spanish Armada in 1588 there was a huge expansion of maritime trade. |
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France, the Netherlands and England each had a long maritime tradition and had been engaging in privateering. |
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A drillship is a maritime vessel that has been fitted with drilling apparatus. |
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Columbus's first voyage in 1492 spurred maritime exploration and, from 1497, a number of explorers headed west. |
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Between 1325 and 1357 Afonso IV of Portugal encouraged maritime commerce and ordered the first explorations. |
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Rotterdam is known for the Erasmus University, its riverside setting, lively cultural life, and maritime heritage. |
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The Cherbourg economy derives a large part of its activities from its maritime position. |
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Evidence of maritime trade between civilizations dates back at least 90 millennia. |
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Oil spills are recorded both in case of maritime routes and pipeline routes to the main refineries. |
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They used the ancient Somali maritime vessel known as the beden to transport their cargo. |
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The majority of commerce took place via maritime shipping due to undeveloped roadways between the 16th and 18th centuries. |
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The coastal provinces of Holland and Zeeland had for centuries prior to Spanish rule been important hubs of the European maritime trade network. |
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The creation of a maritime empire to rival the British and French empires became an ambition to mark Germany as a truly global great power. |
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Along with its victory over France in India, the Seven Years' War therefore left Britain as the world's most powerful maritime power. |
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The island is dominated by a maritime climate with quite narrow temperature differences between seasons. |
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As with the rest of the British Isles and Scotland, Dumfries experiences a maritime climate with cool summers and mild winters. |
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It has a changeable, maritime climate and is one of the wettest countries in Europe. |
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Liverpool experiences a temperate maritime climate, like much of the British Isles, with relatively cool summers and mild winters. |
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The country lies within the north temperate zone and has a changeable, maritime climate. |
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The climate of Preston is of a temperate maritime type, with a narrow range of temperatures, similar to the rest of the British Isles. |
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One of the difficulties in implementing MARPOL arises from the very international nature of maritime shipping. |
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Nigeria shares international maritime borders with coast-line countries like Equatorial Guinea, Cameroun, Benin Republic and Ghana. |
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The Trinidad sailed east from the Philippines, trying to find a maritime path back to the Americas, but was unsuccessful. |
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The country's maritime territory in the Bay of Bengal is roughly equal to the size of its land area. |
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Effect of French maritime pine bark extract on endometriosis as compared with leuprorelin acetate. |
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Relations were in a brief deadlock due to a naval standoff in 2008 over disputed maritime territory. |
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Modern Le Havre remains deeply influenced by its employment and maritime traditions. |
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La Pallice, the grand port maritime de La Rochelle is the commercial, deep water port of La Rochelle. |
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A coast guard or coastguard is a maritime security organization of a particular country. |
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The Cholas excelled in maritime activity in both military and the mercantile fields. |
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Some maritime borders have remained indeterminate despite efforts to clarify them. |
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Ushant is famous for its maritime past, both as a fishing community and as a key landmark in the Channel approaches. |
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In 16th century China, the Ming Dynasty's economy was stimulated by maritime trade with the Portuguese, Spanish, and Dutch. |
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Little ships in glass were always popular in Venetian collections since Venice had a long-established maritime tradition. |
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There is some maritime moderation from the Atlantic which renders the Swedish continental climate less severe than that of nearby Russia. |
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The maritime heritage of Devon made sea shanties, hornpipes and naval or sea ballads important parts of regional folk music. |
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On 7 April, Britain declared a maritime exclusion zone of 200 nautical miles around the Islands. |
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While songs with maritime themes were sung, all manner of popular songs and ballads on any subject might be sung off watch. |
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For a maritime power the loss of their access to the Mediterranean stung financially and psychologically, and the Carthaginians sued for peace. |
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Many annual maritime festivals in Britain and across the Channel provide contexts for performance. |
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The Pasdar maritime arm, as opposed to the Iranian Navy, has commonly been viewed with suspicion for hotheadedness. |
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The defeat of Pisa, which never fully recovered as a maritime competitor, resulted in gain of control of the commerce of Corsica by Genoa. |
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However, as with the attacks in the south, the Germans failed to prevent maritime movements or cripple industry in the regions. |
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Estuaries form a transition zone between freshwater river environments and saltwater maritime environments. |
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It is an important centre for maritime industries and maritime trade in Europe. |
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Long stretches of beach, sand dunes, marshes, and maritime forests create a unique environment where wind and waves shape the topography. |
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The Russians were in constant pursuit of a warm water port on the Pacific Ocean, for their navy as well as for maritime trade. |
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Calais remained an important maritime city and smuggling center throughout the 17th century. |
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The Bibby Group has continued with its maritime activities, with a fleet of super tankers and floatels. |
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But the Bibby Group also continued its maritime activities building up a fleet of supertankers and floatels. |
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When the family Key buys this ship in 1993, the continuing of a unique maritime monument was certain. |
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The loch would have been used historically for traditional maritime activities including fishing. |
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The number of maritime prepositioning ships would be reduced with just over half a squadron rather than by a whole squadron. |
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A privateer was a private person or ship that engaged in maritime warfare under a commission of war. |
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The European part of the Netherlands has a moderate maritime climate, with cool summers and mild winters. |
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The discovery of new maritime trade routes by Western European states allowed them to avoid the Ottoman trade monopoly. |
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Other less important museums reflect the history of Le Havre and its maritime vocation. |
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India's Andaman and Nicobar Islands share a maritime border with Thailand and Indonesia. |
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The Royal Navy also contributes to the combined maritime forces in the Gulf in support of coalition operations. |
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Wexford became a major maritime port exporting fish, cloth, wool and hides. |
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The treasure fleet had a large number of warships to protect their precious cargo and to secure the maritime routes. |
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In littoral zones, breaking wave is so intense and the depth measurement so low, that maritime currents reach often 1 to 2 knots. |
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Similar foods are consumed by other maritime cultures throughout the world, such as the Chinese people. |
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In the deep however, maritime currents are caused by the temperature gradients and the salinity between water density masses. |
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East Timor inherited no permanent maritime boundaries when it attained independence. |
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Milford Haven Museum, located in the marina, houses a collection which focusses on the maritime history of the town. |
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Many of the towns and villages along the coast have small harbours and facilities for sailing, dolphin watching and other maritime activities. |
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Because Indonesia encompasses a sprawling archipelago, maritime shipping provides essential links between parts of the country. |
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It has a third of the budget and a fraction of the maritime vessels. |
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Sperry invented the first marine gyrocompass in 1908 and earned more than 350 patents during his career in the maritime industry. |
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The precipitation levels and the level of maritime moderation varies depending on location and elevation. |
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It serves as a key refuelling and transshipment center, and is the principal maritime port for imports from and exports to neighboring Ethiopia. |
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Generalov has committed to buying FESCO's loss-making maritime shipping division at a later date. |
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Because of its sharp topography and maritime influences, San Francisco exhibits a multitude of distinct microclimates. |
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Beside the maritime museum is the DLR Lexicon, the central library and cultural centre of DLR County Council. |
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The village is important in maritime history, with two ferry services connecting Scotland and Northern Ireland. |
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Until the 1970s, the Breton road network was poor because maritime and rail transport prevailed. |
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Adjustment of these boundaries is called, in international law, maritime delimitation. |
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The international maritime signal flag for M is a white saltire on a blue background, and indicates a stopped vessel. |
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The image was praised by contemporary critics and founded Turner's reputation, as both an oil painter and a painter of maritime scenes. |
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Tim Spall's maritime excursions were also good fun, and the latest star to get their sea legs is actor and comedian Adrian Edmondson. |
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Until the early 20th century, Cardigan Bay supported a strong maritime industry. |
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St Andrews has a temperate maritime climate, which is relatively mild despite its northerly latitude. |
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Since the province is almost surrounded by the sea, the climate is closer to maritime than to continental climate. |
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When the Portuguese Vasco da Gama arrived in India in 1498, he opened a direct maritime route between South Asia and Europe. |
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Throughout the war, American privateers devastated the maritime economy by capturing ships and looting almost every community outside of Halifax. |
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The United States had come to the fore as a maritime leader, especially due to the nation's design of packet ships. |
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John Guy states that Tamil was the lingua franca for early maritime traders from India. |
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Leicester experiences a maritime climate with mild to warm summers and cool winters, rain spread throughout the year, and low sunshine levels. |
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When an overlap occurs, it is up to the states to delineate the actual maritime boundary. |
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Historically the Basques abroad were often employed in shepherding and ranching and by maritime fisheries and merchants. |
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The wider maritime region and much trade was under Dutch control for the following period. |
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By the Yuan Dynasty there had been several maritime routes from China to Africa. |
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Portugal's maritime borders, also known as the Exclusive economic zone of Portugal is currently disputed by Spain in the Savage Islands area. |
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The squadrons had operated Nimrod MR2 maritime patrol aircraft at RAF Kinloss and between them will comprise eighteen aircrews. |
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The village is the transport and shopping centre for the area as well as having a harbour and marina with pontoons for maritime visitors. |
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Her Majesty's Naval Service, also known as the Senior Service, is the United Kingdom's naval warfare and maritime service. |
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As with the rest of Scotland, Dunbar experiences a maritime climate with cool summers and mild winters. |
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The Cairngorms represents an unusually cold area of mountains in a maritime climate at 57 degrees north. |
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As with the rest of Western Scotland, Tiree experiences a maritime climate with cool summers and mild winters. |
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In the Iraq war in 2003, the vessel was air defence commander to the UK maritime battle group and guardship to the fleet flagship, HMS Ark Royal. |
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Another of its duties was the protection of the crucial maritime trade routes against the threat of pirates. |
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Oil exploration, licensed by the Falkland Islands Government, remains controversial as a result of maritime disputes with Argentina. |
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Expansion of the whaling industry was triggered by the second Bounty Act, introduced in 1750 to increase Britain's maritime and naval skill base. |
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