- river,
canal or lake, is
navigable if it is deep, wide and calm
enough for a
water vessel (e.g. boats) to p**** safely.
Navigability is also
referred to in...
-
Navigable aqueducts (sometimes
called navigable water bridges) are
bridge structures that
carry navigable waterway canals over
other rivers, valleys,...
-
Navigable servitude is a
doctrine in
United States constitutional law that
gives the
federal government the
right to
regulate navigable waterways as an...
- A
waterway is any
navigable body of water.
Broad distinctions are
useful to
avoid ambiguity, and
disambiguation will be of
varying importance depending...
-
waterways of the
United States include more than 25,000 mi (40,000 km) of
navigable waters. Much of the
commercially important waterways of the
United States...
-
Bergholt on the
River Stour. It is also
known by the
subtitle Scene on a
Navigable River.
Although based in London,
Constable frequently painted scenes from...
-
important for the
functionality of
ports and
other bodies of
water used for
navigability for shipping. Naturally,
channels will
change their depth and capacity...
- The
Hierarchical navigable small world (HNSW)
algorithm is a graph-based
approximate nearest neighbor search technique used in many
vector databases....
- (typically 30 years). Free-flowing
rivers use the low
navigable water level (also
lowest navigable water level, LNWL) as a low
reference water level. When...
-
Voies navigables de
France (French pronunciation: [vwa naviɡabl də fʁɑ̃s], VNF, English:
Navigable Waterways of France) is the
French navigation authority...