Its telecommunications and electronics group produces electrical connectors, conduits, printed circuit boards, and undersea fiber-optic cable. |
|
The beautiful coral reefs made the undersea world even more splendid and fantastic. |
|
Telephone companies first employed satellites to connect calls where there were no undersea cables. |
|
A company partly owned by the Indian government is buying a critical part of the world's undersea cable network. |
|
The repair of the US-China undersea fibre optic cable, damaged Friday night for the second time in a month, was initiated Monday. |
|
It was during this time that he began planning the creation of a new and very different submarine to be used in undersea research. |
|
He is talking about people laying undersea fibre optic cable, but the image is more general than that. |
|
Whatever the exact explanation, it is well known that not every undersea earthquake produces a tsunami. |
|
A damaged undersea transatlantic cable is being blamed for causing havoc for Net and phone users in the UK last night. |
|
The signals are transmitted either by satellite, microwave or by undersea cable. |
|
In Asia, the company's subsidiary owns undersea cables, fiber optic rings, and Web hosting centers in several cities. |
|
He was one of history's greatest explorers, whose thrilling undersea adventures introduced the wonders of the deep to millions. |
|
Some of the salt in the oceans comes from undersea volcanoes and hydrothermal vents. |
|
In 1929, for example, a relatively modest quake triggered an undersea landslide on the continental slope off Canada. |
|
In Asia, shrimp ponds destroyed vast swaths of mangrove forests, the key nursery habitat for many undersea creatures in tropical waters. |
|
It was an undersea fairyland, with profusions of rainbow-laden fish so thick they blocked out the sun. |
|
The signals are transmitted either by satellite or microwave or by undersea cable. |
|
Tsunamis are waves formed when huge masses of water are displaced by undersea volcanic eruptions or earthquakes. |
|
Her displacement exceeds 3000 tons, making her the biggest undersea craft yet built. |
|
The leaders discussed jointly exploring for undersea resources in the Gulf of Tonkin, known in China as the Beibu Gulf. |
|
|
Unmanned air surface and undersea vehicles can substitute for the loss of a number of ships, but not for all of them. |
|
Today, it is practically unknown to outsiders, a remote marine wilderness teeming with undersea life and dotted with day-dreamy desert islands. |
|
There aren't any chemical signs that the recent warming stems from increased undersea hydrothermal activity in the region, says Freeland. |
|
Volcanic activity and outbursts of undersea gases are the prime suspects for these periods of lethal pollution. |
|
Adventure tourism has entered the picture in recent years, with customers paying steep prices to visit the undersea wreck. |
|
By this stage the undersea cable from Java had reached Darwin and the northern tip of Australia was at last connected to the rest of the world. |
|
Because what our man here is really notorious for, of course, is that undersea cable thingy, global whatsis, crossing thingamajig. |
|
While running keeps him fit, his passion is scuba diving and snorkelling and exploring the fascinating undersea world. |
|
The company claims that it is presently involved in almost every undersea cable route in the world. |
|
It was impressive considering that the largest undersea transoceanic telephone cable at the time carried only 256 channels. |
|
But ripping yarns of undersea adventure failed to describe stinking bilges and hideous, overflowing buckets of garbage or worse. |
|
When such big undersea earthquakes do strike, giant tidal waves, given the name tsunamis by the Japanese, are sure to follow. |
|
The bacteria-like organism lives in a hellish undersea environment where water boils out from underwater vents called black smokers. |
|
The ancient sponges provided much of the backbone of the undersea reef structures. |
|
The Ohio class submarines serve the United States Navy as the virtually undetectable undersea launch platforms of intercontinental missiles. |
|
Somebody has to ask the question of how the chart makers could neglect to find an entire undersea mountain range. |
|
Hydrothermal vents result from undersea cracks in the earth's crust, which allow lava and hot fluids to seep out. |
|
Archaeologists continue to search the undersea area, hoping to uncover more mysteries from a once prosperous city that existed more than 300 years before Christ. |
|
Scientists have recommended the establishment of marine protected areas to protect marine mammals from undersea noise. |
|
When scientists last month tried to revisit an undersea hydrothermal vent that was first discovered nearly a quarter of a century ago, they were in for a shock. |
|
|
Apparently an undersea cable connecting Shanghai to the US was severed. |
|
Marvels of integration, the reefs are like bustling undersea communities. |
|
Iran, along with Russia, maintains that the undersea resources of the Caspian Sea belong to the five states that share its shoreline. |
|
Mr Vajpayee has ended the monopoly and will allow private Internet service providers to do their own deals with the operators of undersea cables. |
|
Think advanced unmanned vehicles, all-aspect, broadband stealth, and undersea warfare. |
|
The Cousteau team's inventions have made filming undersea life possible, so that people can learn to understood and love it. |
|
Together, they collect flotsam and wrack that tell of shipwrecks, shifting undersea tectonic plates, the birth and death of sea creatures, their migrations and molts. |
|
There is an expanded place-name index with more than 150,000 entries, and separate undersea, Moon, and Mars features. |
|
In our sleepy little town where things moved with the soporific gait of undersea vegetation, high fashion made its startling appearance all of a sudden! |
|
He and colleagues were working on a ship towing a sonar radar when they approached an undersea ridge. |
|
The team needed artificial lighting to render undersea landscapes with the full range of tints, beginning just a few meters below the surface. |
|
The artifacts came from undersea dives and excavations from the area, which has been inhabited for at least 3,000 years. |
|
The Gully is one of themost prominent undersea features on the east coast of Canada. |
|
The technology used does not require undersea work and allows equipment to be raised out of the water for maintenance operations. |
|
In your opinion, does this mean that other players are coveting the undersea resources of the Caspian Sea, be they private or public? |
|
Massive undersea landslides and the breakage of ice or sediment dams impounding large lakes are terrestrial processes that lead to release of water. |
|
One way to do this is to decrease or eliminate the high application and licence fees required to land and operate undersea cables. |
|
As this undersea Argonaut cavorted amidst hordes of angel, parrot, trigger, soldierfish and more, this novice couldn't have had a better instructor. |
|
On entering the water, I am immediately on an undersea treadmill, legs pumping furiously, pressure gauge falling like the altimeter of a crashing aircraft. |
|
Iceland sits precariously atop the Mid-Atlantic Ridge, a vast undersea mountain range whose subsurface volcanoes account for much of the country's tumultuous terrain. |
|
|
They are also more ecologically friendly, as the harvesting method does not cause damage to undersea flora or fauna. |
|
Underwater shipwrecks are a testament to the dangerous waters, and those undersea monuments still attract scuba divers in large numbers from around the world. |
|
The results of the last offshore drilling campaign removed a number of geological uncertainties regarding the central portion of the undersea alignment of the project. |
|
The North Stream project's undersea path raises a good deal of questions. |
|
In addition to access to the undersea backbones, telecommunications specialists maintain that it is necessary to create backbones across the entire continent. |
|
Massive undersea tremors triggered so-called tsunamis off the island of Sumatra, itself located in a seismically volatile area of the Indian Ocean. |
|
To visit the undersea realm of Artur, the High Prince, and the rest of the royal merfamily, she has to fin it to the Cayman Islands. |
|
As of 2013, Aberdeen remained a major world center for undersea petroleum technology. |
|
On 18 January 2012, Iraq was connected to the undersea communications network for the first time. |
|
For the Kwakwaka'wakw, the killer whale was regarded as the ruler of the undersea world, with sea lions for slaves and dolphins for warriors. |
|
Tsunami waves do not resemble normal undersea currents or sea waves, because their wavelength is far longer. |
|
Before 1914, international communication was conducted via undersea cables, most under British control, laid along shipping lanes. |
|
Aquatic organisms invariably attach themselves to the undersea portions of oil platforms, turning them into artificial reefs. |
|
Most recently, blockades have sometimes included cutting off electronic communications by jamming radio signals and severing undersea cables. |
|
The sky for an aquanaut in an undersea habitat has some unusual features. |
|
Why don't these very colourful undersea denizens look blue? |
|
Tideway carried out rock placement services and excavation works to protect or stabilise undersea pipelines and cables on assignment from major installers of pipelines or oil and gas companies. |
|
A thrilling dogfight highlights the cover of this issue of Yarns, which featured two aerial adventure stories, along with a western, an undersea treasure quest and others. |
|
There must be much more stringent regulation concerning the laying of undersea power and telecommunication cables or any foreign objects on the seabed where the lives of our fishermen might be endangered. |
|
If the wreckage is localised, a campaign of undersea observation, cartography, raising some parts of the equipment from the wreckage and, if need be, the recovery of any human remains will follow the searches. |
|
|
The reason is that one place in the ocean depths where methane hydrate forms all too frequently is inside pipes carrying oil from undersea wells to rigs at the surface. |
|
Our Russian and German partners are, of course, arguing that they are taking more into account than just the construction costs of the undersea pipeline, also factoring in things like operation and transport costs. |
|
In particular, in the case of the Sweden-Poland project the reason is the additional costs resulting from the need to provide a double instead of a single undersea cable in order to protect the marine environment. |
|
Symposium proceedings and KMI's reports furnish planners with tools to gauge undersea fibreoptics markets. |
|
They are swimming toward some kind of undersea plant, itself surrounded by watermelon-size amoeba shapes with long, fingery edges. |
|
The coal was often called sea coal because it was washed up from undersea outcrops on the Northumbrian coast. |
|
The Quaternary undersea valley Fosse Dangaered, and Castle Hill landslip at the English portal, caused concerns. |
|
Tunnelling was a major engineering challenge, with the only precedent being the undersea Seikan Tunnel in Japan. |
|
Towards the completion of the undersea drives, the UK TBMs were driven steeply downwards and buried clear of the tunnel. |
|
The rail tunnel stretches 31 miles, and at its lowest point the tunnel is 250 feet undersea. |
|
Such active rifting lifted great undersea mountain chains along the welts, raising eustatic sea levels worldwide. |
|
Microscopic life undersea is incredibly diverse and still poorly understood. |
|
The data showed the configuration of the seafloor where he saw that some undersea mountains had flat tops. |
|
The Benham Plateau to the east in the Philippine Sea is an undersea region active in tectonic subduction. |
|
However, the installation of the undersea cable in December 2013 indicates that the project is moving along swiftly. |
|
The Grand Canyon is a rift in the Earth's surface, but is smaller than some of the undersea ones. |
|
Most have been found on a chain of undersea volcanoes called the mid-ocean ridge, however, and very few are known in the Antarctic. |
|
Carey, both volcanologists at the University of Rhode Island in Narragansett, studied ash ejected from five different eruptions, including some deep undersea. |
|
The tube worm species Alvinella pompejana live around vent systems all along the East Pacific Rise, an undersea geological formation that stretches for thousands of miles. |
|
Some of the children are painting a mural of undersea life, and others are working at their teleputers, researching and producing multimedia reports on various marine topics. |
|
|
The rapid expansion of telegraph networks took place throughout the century, with the first undersea cable being built by John Watkins Brett between France and England. |
|
For fans of the undersea sci-fi classic The Abyss, a pteropod seems a likely inspiration for the ethereal alien creatures that were the saviors at the film's end. |
|
It was abandoned when the undersea Atlantic Cable proved successful. |
|
Publications by the USGS describe large stores of undersea hydrates worldwide, including the Blake Ridge area, off the coast of the southeastern United States. |
|
In December 2003, Spain and Morocco agreed to explore the construction of an undersea rail tunnel to connect their rail systems across the Strait. |
|
There was plenty of experience with excavating through chalk in the mining industry, while the undersea crossover caverns were a complex engineering problem. |
|
Her partner in the exhibition is another local artist of high standing, Ann Bridges from Ruthin, who uses a stencil-based monoprint technique to explore the undersea world. |
|
The adventures get under way as a powerful artificial seaquake strands a research team in an undersea lab, and the crew of the Thunderbirds must determine who caused it. |
|
It is bounded on the west by the Drake Passage and on the north, east, and south by the Scotia Arc, an undersea ridge and island arc system supporting various islands. |
|
On the island itself, power converters will change the alternating current to direct current that will be carried to the mainland via undersea cables. |
|
Submarines are also used in tourism, and for undersea archaeology. |
|