The St Lawrence seaway, one of the world's busiest shipping lanes after the English Channel, exits around the northern tip of Nova Scotia. |
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The presence of this seaway is consistent with geophysical and geological evidence for a suture between the two massifs. |
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The dog boats were also small in comparison to their opponents but rode better in a seaway. |
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This number results from a formula that is intended to represent a boat's expected motion in a seaway. |
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Unfortunately we need two miles of seaway to stop our ship and our rudder is jammed, hence we cannot change course. |
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Columbus set out to find a new seaway to India and he ended up discovering America. |
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In a dangerous combat situation, or even a crowded seaway, this can provide a huge advantage. |
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The earlier occurrences in North Carolina suggest that the genus dispersed westward through the Central American seaway. |
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This scenario maximizes the depth and linkage of the basins forming the seaway. |
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We put the boat in at Labrador and headed off around Wave Break Island to the actual seaway. |
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The crates are placed on the flat in such a way so as to interlock them from gunwale to gunwale, in an attempt to immobilize them in a seaway. |
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Palaeobiogeographers have considered it to be an equatorial seaway extending from Central America to South-East Asia, characterized by a distinctive fauna. |
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Shipments have to move before freeze up and closure of the seaway in about 90Â days. |
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This process is awkward, especially since the operator is wearing a bulky lifejacket and a hard hat and if the lifeboat is moving in a seaway. |
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The evaluation form also notes the section of the seaway where the pilotage took place and includes space for general comments. |
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When water levels are low, those ships may be carrying much less cargo than competitors who are not using the seaway. |
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The products will be then moved to their final destination by rail, road or seaway, according to the needs. |
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Every battle ever fought there was fought over control of the seaway. |
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One of the possible issues with this timing was the continental debris cluttering up the seaway between the two plates in question. |
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More than forty buildings, many of them brought here from the seven villages now flooded by the St. Lawrence seaway and power projects, have been refurnished with authentic furniture of their time. |
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The bridge was constructed as a high-level crossing over the north channel of the St. Lawrence River and the old Cornwall canal to accommodate a plan for an all Canadian seaway that unfortunately was never built. |
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In the tests provided for in paragraph 1.4 of the stability requirements included in Annex I, the ship should be capable of withstanding a seaway as defined in paragraph 3 hereunder in the worst-damage-case scenario. |
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At the time, after several warm millennia, a melting ice sheet in North America collapsed and a gigantic lake drained into the North Atlantic through the St Lawrence seaway. |
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Buffalo, with its access to the Great Lakes and the St Lawrence seaway, was once an economic engine, not just for the region, but for the country. |
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The future of the seaway crucially depends on the water levels in the lakes, and America's drought last summer, among the worst on record, has lowered water-levels in Lake Michigan and Huron to near-record lows. |
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Is it because the seaway is in bad shape, because it would cost a lot to modernize it, because the government thinks it might be better to abandon it and let marine traffic go to the eastern United States? |
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The closing of the seaway allowed a major migration of land mammals between North and South America or The Great American Interchange. |
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The issue is the fact that we are putting a terminal in a very difficult location on a well-travelled and used seaway that will most likely expand its use in the future. |
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This new model test method aims to include these refinements and, together with the appended Guidance Notes, provide a more robust procedure for the assessment of survivability of a damaged ro-ro passenger ship in a seaway. |
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The strait is the busiest international seaway in the world, used by over 400 commercial vessels daily. |
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Avalonia had not yet collided with Laurentia, but as Avalonia inched towards Laurentia, the seaway between them, a remnant of the Iapetus Ocean, was slowly shrinking. |
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This route, known as the Mangazeya seaway, after its eastern terminus, the trade depot of Mangazeya, was an early precursor to the Northern Sea Route. |
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It was one of the most important ports in the Middle East at the time as it controlled seaway trading routes through the Persian Gulf to India and East Africa. |
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From the docks along the Eastern Seaway to the towering spires along the Western Peaks, the great city slowly rose from its slumber. |
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During her vacations, she cruised along the St. Lawrence Seaway and visited a dude ranch in Wyoming. |
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There was something as massive and significant as the construction of the St. Lawrence Seaway which re-directed much shipping away from Eastern ports. |
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The evidence for when the Central American landmass emerged and the closing of the Central American Seaway can be divided into three categories. |
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Since 1959, the Saint Lawrence Seaway has provided a navigable link between the Atlantic Ocean and the Great Lakes. |
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Previous reports of North American ceratodontids suggest that crushing-toothed lungfishes dominated Cretaceous Interior Seaway coastal systems. |
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Lawrence Seaway, and then British cities such as Montreal to the Hudson River and New York City. |
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From there, it presumably recolonized the North Pacific Ocean during high glaciation periods in the Pleistocene via the Central American Seaway. |
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During the opening of the Atlantic Ocean, sea level was so high that a Western Interior Seaway formed across North America from the Gulf of Mexico to the Arctic Ocean. |
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The Tethys Seaway was not a gateway, but rather a sea in its own right. |
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The identification of Fumicollis highlights once again the significant diversity of hesperornithiforms that existed in the Late Cretaceous Western Interior Seaway. |
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The Central American Seaway was closed by the elevation of the Central American Isthmus which is proposed to have occurred three and a half to five million years ago. |
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