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Seakeeping ability or
seaworthiness is a
measure of how well-suited a
watercraft is to
conditions when underway. A ship or boat
which has good seakeeping...
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Seaworthiness refers to the ****urance that a
vessel is
seaworthy,
meaning that it is
properly equipped and
sufficiently maintained to
survive the risks...
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naval architect Colin Archer.
These boats were
designed for
extreme seaworthiness in the
rough conditions of the
North Sea. The late 19th
century Archer...
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responsible for the safe and
efficient operation of the ship,
including its
seaworthiness,
safety and security,
cargo operations, navigation, crew management...
- of gl**** or
crystal were
added because skeptics would question the
seaworthiness of a
humble log-boat on the high seas. A steel-reinforced Utsuro-bune...
- one of the prin****l
sponsors of Drake's
world voyage. A full-sized,
seaworthy reconstruction is in London, on the
south bank of the Thames.
Queen Elizabeth...
- ship on rocks, land or shoal; poor maintenance,
resulting in a lack of
seaworthiness; or the
destruction of a ship
either intentionally or by
violent weather...
- that is afloat, but
incapable of
going to sea,
whereas convict ships are
seaworthy vessels that
transport convicted felons from
their place of conviction...
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ratifications and
denouncements of the
three conventions is
shown below:
Seaworthiness (law)
Carriage of
Goods by Sea Act 1971
Carriage of
Goods by Sea Act...
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threat to the ship's
seaworthiness, but
inspectors never tested them. Yet the
Marine Electric was
repeatedly certified as
seaworthy. Part of the problem...