- The
wolverine (/ˈwʊlvəriːn/ WUUL-və-reen, US also /ˌwʊlvəˈriːn/ WUUL-və-REEN; Gulo gulo), also
called the
carcajou or
quickhatch (from East Cree, kwiihkwahaacheew)...
-
Royal Navy have been
named HMS Wolverine, or the
alternative spelling Wolverene,
after the wolverine: HMS Wolverine (1798) was a 14-gun brig-sloop, previously...
- a
monograph of
North American Mustelidae, in
which an
account of the
wolverene, the
martens or sables, the ermine, the mink and
various other kinds of...
- HMS
Wolverene hove down for
repairs in
Bermuda Harbour, 1855, by Corbett...
- HMS
Wolverine (or
Wolverene) was a
Royal Navy 18-gun Cruizer-class brig-sloop,
launched in 1805 at Topsham, near Exeter.
Early in her
career she was involved...
- 17
September 1878. p. 2.
Retrieved 20
March 2017. "Cruise of H.M.S.
Wolverene".
Evening Post. 8
September 1880. p. 2.
Retrieved 14
August 2013. Royal...
- HMS
Wolverine (or
Wolverene, or Woolverene), was a
Royal Navy 14-gun brig-sloop,
formerly the
civilian collier Rattler that the
Admiralty purchased in...
-
Retrieved 12
March 2021 – via
National Library of Australia. "H. M. S.
Wolverene".
Australian Town and
Country Journal. Vol. XX, no. 495. New
South Wales...
- the East Indies. In
February 1840 he
moved to the
smaller 16-gun HMS
Wolverene under Captain William Tucker off the
coast of Africa. On 25
August 1840...
-
captured Neptunus when
Neptunus was
going into
Havre de Grace. The next day
Wolverene brought Neptunus into Portsmouth,
together with her
cargo of
naval stores...