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  2. The Viking-style boat reviving traditional skills - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/viking-style-boat-reviving...

    A 120-year-old sailing boat of a design dating back to the Vikings is helping to preserve the future of traditional boatbuilding in Scotland. "Bee" is one of the very few remaining Stroma yoles ...

  3. Viking ship - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Viking_ship

    Viking ships were marine vessels of unique structure, used in Scandinavia throughout the Middle Ages. The boat-types were quite varied, depending on what the ship was intended for, [ 1 ] but they were generally characterized as being slender and flexible boats, with symmetrical ends with true keel .

  4. Robert MacGregor (engineer) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_MacGregor_(engineer)

    Robert MacGregor was a British engineer, who, during the 1920s, concerned over unnecessary losses of North Sea colliers, developed the first steel hatch cover.. The design was simple and consisted of five articulated leaves that stowed neatly at the end of each hatch.

  5. Butterworth cover - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Butterworth_Cover

    Butterworth hatches are not the main access hatches, but are the servicing hatches, and are generally closed with a metal cover plate with a gasket that is fastened to the deck by a number of bolts which stick up from the deck. Holes on the edges of the plate fit over these bolts and the cover is fastened down with nuts or dogs.

  6. This tiny South Jersey town has built stunning boats for 60 ...

    www.aol.com/news/tiny-south-jersey-town-built...

    Viking Yachts has braved stormy seas and enjoyed smooth sailing, growing over 60 years of building boats in the New Gretna section of Bass River. This tiny South Jersey town has built stunning ...

  7. Hugin (longship) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hugin_(longship)

    The Hugin in 1949 The Hugin in the sluices of IJmuiden, the Netherlands (1949). The Hugin is a reconstructed longship located at Pegwell Bay in Kent, England.It was a gift from the Danish government commemorating the 1500th anniversary of the arrival of Hengist and Horsa, leaders of the Anglo-Saxon invasion, at nearby Ebbsfleet.

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