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The Eisenhower Locks in Massena, New York St. Lawrence Seaway St. Lawrence Seaway separated navigation channel near Montreal. The St. Lawrence Seaway (French: la Voie Maritime du Saint-Laurent) is a system of locks, canals, and channels in Canada and the United States that permits oceangoing vessels to travel from the Atlantic Ocean to the Great Lakes of North America, as far inland as Duluth ...
The Atlantic Ocean is here defined in its widest sense, to include its marginal seas: the Baltic Sea, the Black Sea, the Caribbean Sea, the Gulf of Mexico, the English Channel, the Labrador Sea, the Mediterranean Sea, the mid-Atlantic Ocean, the North Sea, the North Channel, the Norwegian Sea, and the waters of West Africa
Ship Year Possible or Last Known Location København: 1928–1929: somewhere between Buenos Aires and Australia (also listed under Atlantic Ocean) Madagascar: 1853: somewhere between Port Phillip and London [90] (also listed under Atlantic Ocean) Neva: 1887: somewhere between Banyuwangi and Lisbon [18] (also listed under Atlantic Ocean) Shannon ...
An ocean liner and refrigerated cargo ship that was torpedoed by U-96 about 30 nmi (56 km; 35 mi) north of Rockall 58°10′N 13°24′W / 58.16°N 13.40°W / 58.16; -13.40 ( SS Almeda
French ship Achille (1804) Adelaide (shipwrecked 1850) Afon Alaw (1891 ship) HMS Agamemnon (1781) Agincourt (1804 ship) Allanshaw; Alma A. E. Holmes; ARA Almirante Domecq Garcia (D23) MV Altamar; French brig Amarante (1793) RMS Amazon (1851) SS America (1939) SS Andrea Doria; Andrea Gail; SS Anglo-African; SS Anglo-Australian (1927) Anna ...
The ship was en route to Montreal from Buffalo, New York. All crew were saved and taken aboard Dalwarnic. Ship was named after one other co-owners of the ship. [35] USS Ohio United States Navy: 1884 A ship of the line that burned in Greenport Harbor. Oregon United Kingdom: 6 March 1886
The US Coast Guard announced on Thursday that the remains of the submersible vessel lost in the Atlantic Ocean had been found by an ROV on the ocean bed near the wreck of the famed liner ...
In 1952, Ann Davison was the first woman to single-handedly sail the Atlantic Ocean. In 1956, the sail-equipped raft L'Égaré II crossed from Newfoundland to England, after the failure of L'Égaré I. [12] In 1965, Robert Manry crossed the Atlantic from the U.S. to England non-stop in a 4.1-metre (13-foot) sailboat named Tinkerbelle. [13]