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FACTORY SHIP

  • Factory ship
  • Large oceangoing fish processing vessel

    A factory ship, also known as a fish processing vessel, is a large ocean-going vessel with extensive on-board facilities for processing and freezing caught

    Factory ship

    Factory ship

    Factory_ship

  • Whaling in Japan
  • Commercial hunting of whales in Japan

    of 6 to 10 whale catchers serving a factory ship. Catchers could range as far as 200 miles from their factory ship, communicating by marine VHF radio.

    Whaling in Japan

    Whaling in Japan

    Whaling_in_Japan

  • Aristotle Onassis
  • Greek business magnate (1906–1975)

    dates between which whales could be taken. The Onassis factory ship and its attendant catcher ships paid little attention to these restrictions. The Norwegian

    Aristotle Onassis

    Aristotle Onassis

    Aristotle_Onassis

  • Nisshin Maru
  • Whaling factory ship of the Japanese whaling fleet

    Japanese whaling fleet and was the world's only whaler factory ship. It was the research base ship for the Institute of Cetacean Research for 2002 to 2007

    Nisshin Maru

    Nisshin Maru

    Nisshin_Maru

  • Flensing
  • Process of harvesting blubber from whales

    season when the Norwegian factory ship Sir James Clark Ross spent an entire season in the Ross Sea flensing whales alongside the ship while anchored in Discovery

    Flensing

    Flensing

    Flensing

  • Kani Kōsen
  • 1929 short story by Takiji Kobayashi

    released in English as The Cannery Boat (1933), The Factory Ship (1973), and The Crab Cannery Ship (2013). Kobayashi began writing the work late in 1928

    Kani Kōsen

    Kani Kōsen

    Kani_Kōsen

  • Whaler
  • Specialized ship designed for whaling

    continue with industrial whaling, and one, Japan, still dedicates a single factory ship for the industry. The vessels used by aboriginal whaling communities

    Whaler

    Whaler

    Whaler

  • Fishing vessel
  • Boat or ship used to catch fish

    Algerine-class minesweeper (HMS Felicity) with refrigeration equipment and a factory ship stern ramp, to produce the first combined freezer/stern trawler in 1947

    Fishing vessel

    Fishing vessel

    Fishing_vessel

  • Ship
  • Large watercraft

    Admiralty law Airship Auxiliary ship Chartering (shipping) Dynamic positioning Environmental impact of shipping Factory ship Ferry Flag state Fluyt Galleon

    Ship

    Ship

    Ship

  • FV Margiris
  • Fishing trawler and factory ship

    fishing boat. It is a 9,500 GT super trawler and factory ship. In 2012, Seafish Tasmania brought the ship (then named the Abel Tasman) to Australia. She

    FV Margiris

    FV Margiris

    FV_Margiris

  • Factory
  • Facility where goods are industrially made, or processed

    A factory, manufacturing plant or production plant is an industrial facility, often a complex consisting of several buildings filled with machinery, where

    Factory

    Factory

    Factory

  • Vladivostok 2000
  • Vladivostok 2000 (ex-Damanzaihao) is the world's largest fish factory ship with a mass of 49,367 tons and 228 metres (748 ft 0 in) in length. Since July

    Vladivostok 2000

    Vladivostok_2000

  • Malicious compliance
  • Intentionally causing harm by following a superior's orders

    quotas or performance projections. Examples include: Employees at a factory ship products to customers too early so their inventory is reduced to meet

    Malicious compliance

    Malicious_compliance

  • Whaling in Russia
  • with the purchase of an American cargo ship, which was renamed the Aleut. This remained the only Soviet factory ship until World War II. After the second

    Whaling in Russia

    Whaling in Russia

    Whaling_in_Russia

  • Fishing trawler
  • Commercial vessel designed to operate fishing trawls

    can be a small open boat with only 30 horsepower (22 kW) or a large factory ship with 10,000 horsepower (7457 kW). Trawl variants include beam trawls

    Fishing trawler

    Fishing trawler

    Fishing_trawler

  • Anti-whaling
  • Actions opposing the hunting of whales

    Greenpeace deployed a newly acquired ship, an ex-minesweeper called the James Bay, to confront the Dalniy Vostok factory ship and its catcher fleet once again

    Anti-whaling

    Anti-whaling

    Anti-whaling

  • Takiji Kobayashi
  • Japanese writer

    translated into English as The Cannery Boat (1933), The Factory Ship (1973), and The Crab Cannery Ship (2013), as well as in other languages. Also in 1929

    Takiji Kobayashi

    Takiji Kobayashi

    Takiji_Kobayashi

  • FV Gaul
  • British deep sea factory ship

    The fishing vessel Gaul was a deep sea factory ship based at Hull, United Kingdom. She was launched in December 1971 by Brooke Marine of Lowestoft, entering

    FV Gaul

    FV_Gaul

  • Deutsche Schiff- und Maschinenbau
  • German shipyard cooperative (1926–45)

    scrapped in 1950. AG Weser 1936: whale factory ship Terje Viken for United Whalers Ltd. London. Largest factory ship in the World; March 1941 sunk by U-boats

    Deutsche Schiff- und Maschinenbau

    Deutsche Schiff- und Maschinenbau

    Deutsche_Schiff-_und_Maschinenbau

  • MY Steve Irwin
  • Vessel used by the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society

    and crew. The ship then returned to Fremantle to restock, departing on January 30. In the meantime, Bob Barker had located the factory ship, Nisshin Maru

    MY Steve Irwin

    MY Steve Irwin

    MY_Steve_Irwin

  • Chilean Antarctic Territory
  • Part of West Antarctica claimed by Chile

    been carrying out its operations in Whalers Bay of Deception with the factory ship Gobernador Bories. Other whaling companies followed, with several hundred

    Chilean Antarctic Territory

    Chilean Antarctic Territory

    Chilean_Antarctic_Territory

  • SS Imo
  • Norwegian steamship

    carry livestock and passengers, and converted in 1912 into a whaling factory ship. She was built as Runic, renamed Tampican in 1895, Imo in 1912 and Guvernøren

    SS Imo

    SS Imo

    SS_Imo

  • MY Bob Barker
  • Sea Shepherd Conservation Society ship

    On 6 February 2010, while obstructing the slip-way of Nisshin Maru factory ship, Bob Barker collided with Yūshin Maru No. 3, resulting in a 3-foot-4-inch

    MY Bob Barker

    MY Bob Barker

    MY_Bob_Barker

  • FV Alaska Ranger
  • American fishing factory ship launched 1973 sunk 2008

    Alaska Ranger was a fishing factory ship owned and operated by the Fishing Company of Alaska of Seattle, Washington. The ship was constructed in 1973 for

    FV Alaska Ranger

    FV Alaska Ranger

    FV_Alaska_Ranger

  • White Star Line
  • British shipping company (1845–1934)

    1928 Athenic was sold to a Norwegian firm and converted into a whaling factory ship. In 1929 Corinthic was re-fitted to have single third/tourist class accommodation

    White Star Line

    White Star Line

    White_Star_Line

  • Alfred Ehrenreich
  • sue (unsuccessfully) for loss of earnings. The Istar's conversion to a factory ship was managed by Rudolf Hauschka, who had been with Ehrenreich during the

    Alfred Ehrenreich

    Alfred_Ehrenreich

  • Thorshavet
  • Norwegian whaling factory ship built in 1947 off the coast of Mauritania. It was later named Astra. It collided with the cargo ship Karonga (Singapore)

    Thorshavet

    Thorshavet

    Thorshavet

  • SS Vasari (1908)
  • Steam ocean liner

    a Hull deep-sea fishing undertaking who had her rebuilt as the fish factory ship Arctic Queen. In 1935 she was sold to the USSR, who renamed her Pishchevaya

    SS Vasari (1908)

    SS Vasari (1908)

    SS_Vasari_(1908)

  • Territorial claims in Antarctica
  • in a cove (now Telefon Cove) for repairs. The following spring, the factory ship Gobernador Bories repaired it successfully, allowing the Telefon to sail

    Territorial claims in Antarctica

    Territorial claims in Antarctica

    Territorial_claims_in_Antarctica

  • Tristan da Cunha
  • Group of islands in the South Atlantic

    opened in July 2009. While the replacement factory was being built, MV Kelso came to the island as a factory ship. The St. Helena, Ascension, and Tristan

    Tristan da Cunha

    Tristan da Cunha

    Tristan_da_Cunha

  • SS Runic (1900)
  • Steam ship

    between 1889 and 1895. In 1930 Runic was sold and converted into a whaling factory ship and renamed New Sevilla, she remained in service in this role until September

    SS Runic (1900)

    SS Runic (1900)

    SS_Runic_(1900)

  • Whaling in Norway
  • purchased the Admiralen (first steam powered factory ship to be used in Antarctica in 1905) for its floating factory in 1912. However, even with two catchers

    Whaling in Norway

    Whaling_in_Norway

  • AG Weser
  • Shipbuilding company

    probably by arson 1936 Whale factory ship Terje Viken for United Whalers Ltd. London, worldwide greatest factory ship; March 1941 sunk by German U-boats

    AG Weser

    AG Weser

    AG_Weser

  • Sea
  • Large body of salt water

    a small crew, stern trawlers, purse seiners, long-line factory vessels and large factory ships which are designed to stay at sea for weeks, processing

    Sea

    Sea

    Sea

  • Type R ship
  • US Navy ship classification

    became fish factory ship USS Corduba USS Karin USS Kerstin USS Latona USS Lioba USS Malabar USS Merapi Sold in 1966 became fish factory ship USS Palisana

    Type R ship

    Type R ship

    Type_R_ship

  • Polar Star (novel)
  • 1989 crime novel by Martin Cruz Smith

    gutting fish on a factory ship in the Bering Sea, in part to hide from the KGB, who have tried to kill him. The Soviet factory ship is part of a US-Soviet

    Polar Star (novel)

    Polar_Star_(novel)

  • SS Wandrahm
  • Union. Renamed Onega, she was used as a factory ship. She was on the shipping registers until 1969. As built, the ship was 72.97 metres (239 ft 5 in) long

    SS Wandrahm

    SS_Wandrahm

  • Whale Wars
  • Television series

    attempt to prevent the transfer of a dead whale up the slipway of the factory ship Nisshin Maru. As Watson explained the incident, "We were in the process

    Whale Wars

    Whale_Wars

  • Harold Salvesen
  • British businessman

    shepherd this fleet of ships through the Battle of the Atlantic, with great losses; every Salvesen and Unilever factory ship was sunk, along with two

    Harold Salvesen

    Harold_Salvesen

  • Hell Below Zero
  • 1954 film by Mark Robson

    an associate in a Norwegian whaling company, Bland-Nordahl, is on a factory ship Southern Harvester in Antarctic waters, when he is lost overboard. Duncan

    Hell Below Zero

    Hell_Below_Zero

  • SS Potsdam (1899)
  • Steamship built in 1899

    renamed her Stockholm. In 1929, the ship was acquired by Norwegians, who had it converted into a whaling factory ship, and renamed her Solglimt. In 1941

    SS Potsdam (1899)

    SS Potsdam (1899)

    SS_Potsdam_(1899)

  • Whaling in the United Kingdom
  • Commercial hunting of whales in the United Kingdom

    mariners for the Royal Navy in times of war. Modern whaling, using factory ships and catchers fitted with bow-mounted cannons that fired explosive harpoons

    Whaling in the United Kingdom

    Whaling in the United Kingdom

    Whaling_in_the_United_Kingdom

  • German auxiliary cruiser Pinguin
  • World War II German auxiliary cruiser

    declarations of war and by the end of September a first wave of six ships had been identified. Each ship would need a crew of 284 men, six 150 mm guns, four 20 mm

    German auxiliary cruiser Pinguin

    German auxiliary cruiser Pinguin

    German_auxiliary_cruiser_Pinguin

  • Robots!
  • Board wargame published in 1980

    and factory ships. Each player starts the game with no robots, two factory ships and one heavily armed Q-ship camouflaged to look like a factory ship. Each

    Robots!

    Robots!

  • Southern Whaling and Sealing Company
  • Defunct UK whaling & sealing shipping company

    out of the whaling business. This increased Salvesen's fleet by two factory ships and 15 catchers. The first whaling enterprise on Grytviken, South Georgia

    Southern Whaling and Sealing Company

    Southern_Whaling_and_Sealing_Company

  • Deception Island
  • Active volcanic island in the South Shetland archipelago

    shore-based infrastructure meant that whales had to be towed to moored factory ships for processing; these needed a sheltered anchorage and a plentiful supply

    Deception Island

    Deception Island

    Deception_Island

  • Tonan Maru No. 3
  • Japanese whale oil factory ship (1938–1971)

    the Tonan Maru, was a Japanese whale oil factory ship. Built at Osaka in 1938 she was the largest merchant ship built in Japan to that point. She carried

    Tonan Maru No. 3

    Tonan Maru No. 3

    Tonan_Maru_No._3

  • Sea Shepherd Conservation Society operations
  • Direct action marine conservation operations

    fleet of the Institute of Cetacean Research typically consists of a factory ship, two spotter vessels, and three harpoon boats, though the exact fleet

    Sea Shepherd Conservation Society operations

    Sea Shepherd Conservation Society operations

    Sea_Shepherd_Conservation_Society_operations

  • German submarine U-47 (1938)
  • World War II German submarine

    hrs, five minutes after U-47's last known torpedo attack on the whale factory ship Terje Viken. Nothing further was heard from U-47 after this time. To

    German submarine U-47 (1938)

    German_submarine_U-47_(1938)

  • Fish factory
  • Facility where fish processing is performed

    and fish factories within a few days of being caught. Alternatively, fish can be caught by factory ships which are offshore fish factories that can do

    Fish factory

    Fish factory

    Fish_factory

  • RV Belgica (1884)
  • Research ship built in 1884

    ship, serving Spitsbergen from the Norwegian mainland under the name Isfjord. In 1918, she was sold and renamed Belgica, being converted to a factory

    RV Belgica (1884)

    RV Belgica (1884)

    RV_Belgica_(1884)

  • Battles of Narvik
  • 1940 World War II battles

    11,776 GRT replenishment oiler/maintenance ship Jan Wellem. Jan Wellem, a converted former whale factory ship, awaited the arrival of the German warships

    Battles of Narvik

    Battles of Narvik

    Battles_of_Narvik

  • Nantucket sleighride
  • Dragging of a whaleboat by a harpooned whale while whaling

    twentieth century, the development of the whaling industry led to large factory ships with a fleet of steam-driven whale catchers armed with harpoon guns

    Nantucket sleighride

    Nantucket sleighride

    Nantucket_sleighride

  • SS Suevic
  • British and Norwegian Jubilee-class ocean liner

    ship herself was deliberately broken in two, and a new bow was attached to the salvaged stern portion. Later serving as a Norwegian whaling factory ship

    SS Suevic

    SS Suevic

    SS_Suevic

  • Carl Anton Larsen
  • Whaler and Antarctic explorer

    Norwegian citizenship and took British citizenship. The Norwegian whale factory ship C.A. Larsen was named after him. Carl Anton Larsen was born in Østre

    Carl Anton Larsen

    Carl Anton Larsen

    Carl_Anton_Larsen

  • Slipway
  • Shore ramp from which boats or ships can be lowered into or raised out of the water

    ISBN 978-0-231-03288-9. In 1925 Captain Sørlle of Vestfold fitted out a large factory ship, the S.S. Lancing, with a stern slipway: a long sloping ramp that led

    Slipway

    Slipway

    Slipway

  • SS Medic
  • Steamship built in 1899

    White Star, Medic was sold in 1928 and was converted into a whaling factory ship and renamed Hektoria, she remained in service in this role until being

    SS Medic

    SS Medic

    SS_Medic

  • Russian rescue ship Kommuna
  • Submarine rescue ship in the Russian Navy

    she was laid down at the Putilov Factory (now Kirov Factory) in St. Petersburg in November 1912 as Volkhov. The ship was launched the following year,

    Russian rescue ship Kommuna

    Russian rescue ship Kommuna

    Russian_rescue_ship_Kommuna

  • Operation Hannibal
  • 1945 evacuation of German troops from East Prussia and northern Poland by sea

    than 5,000 tons and many other smaller ships. On 30 January Wilhelm Gustloff, Hansa, and the whaling factory ship Walter Rau left the harbor at Gotenhafen

    Operation Hannibal

    Operation Hannibal

    Operation_Hannibal

  • History of Antarctica
  • been carrying out its operations in Whalers Bay of Deception with the factory ship Gobernador Bories. Other whaling companies followed, such as the Corral

    History of Antarctica

    History of Antarctica

    History_of_Antarctica

  • Jubilee-class ocean liner
  • Ocean liners built in Belfast, 1898–1900

    of Norway who renamed her Hektoria and converted her into a whaling factory ship. In 1932 Hektoria returned to the British register after her ownership

    Jubilee-class ocean liner

    Jubilee-class ocean liner

    Jubilee-class_ocean_liner

  • Fear Factory
  • American industrial metal band

    as a demo; a developmental step toward Soul of a New Machine. Fear Factory shipped the Concrete demo to various labels, and was rejected by a number of

    Fear Factory

    Fear Factory

    Fear_Factory

  • Whaling in Australia
  • Commercial hunting of whales in Australia

    coast of Tasmania. A factory ship reached Tasmania in January 1912 and took 1,599 barrels of oil off the coast. Another factory ship took just 480 barrels

    Whaling in Australia

    Whaling in Australia

    Whaling_in_Australia

  • Singer Corporation
  • American manufacturer of sewing machines

    In 1913, the factory shipped 1.3 million machines. The late 1950s and 1960s saw a period of significant change at the Clydebank factory. In 1958, Singer

    Singer Corporation

    Singer Corporation

    Singer_Corporation

  • Japanese naval codes
  • Ciphers used by the Imperial Japanese Navy in World War II

    code used by merchant ships (commonly known as the "maru code"), broken in May 1940. 28 May 1941, when the whale factory ship Nisshin Maru No. 2 (1937)

    Japanese naval codes

    Japanese_naval_codes

  • HMS Volcano (1836)
  • converted to a factory ship and served in the Baltic during the Russian War. She was sent to China during the Second Opium War as a factory ship. On her return

    HMS Volcano (1836)

    HMS_Volcano_(1836)

  • The White South
  • 1949 novel by Hammond Innes

    1949 thriller novel by the British writer Hammond Innes. It is set on a factory ship operation in the Antarctic Ocean. In 1954 it was adapted into the film

    The White South

    The_White_South

  • Whaling
  • Hunting of whales

    whaling ships in the 17th century; competitive national whaling industries in the 18th and 19th centuries; and the introduction of factory ships and explosive

    Whaling

    Whaling

    Whaling

  • Mount Sourabaya
  • Mountain in the South Sandwich Islands

    Place-Names Committee (UK-APC) in 1971, its name refers to the whaling factory ship Sourabaya, from which an eruption was witnessed in 1935. The most recent

    Mount Sourabaya

    Mount_Sourabaya

  • US FWS Pribilof
  • U.S. fisheries vessel

    Army cargo ship FSR-791. After the NMFS decommissioned her, she operated as a commercial cargo ship and later as a commercial factory ship. The Alden

    US FWS Pribilof

    US FWS Pribilof

    US_FWS_Pribilof

  • Hashidate Maru
  • Japanese tanker boat

    war effort by transporting oil, and was later refitted as a whaling factory ship. On 15 January 1945, while the Hashidate Maru was docked at the Hong

    Hashidate Maru

    Hashidate_Maru

  • Hazen Russell
  • Fisheries Ltd. As the president of Job Brothers Ltd. he created the first factory ship in the world by refitting Blue Peter with a brine freezing system and

    Hazen Russell

    Hazen_Russell

  • Thirteen Factories
  • Area of Guangzhou, China, c. 1684 to 1856

    of their own seamen to these ships as guards. In 1686, the Europeans were allowed to rent accommodations in the factory quarter to avoid the necessity

    Thirteen Factories

    Thirteen Factories

    Thirteen_Factories

  • List of museum ships
  • This list of museum ships is a sortable, annotated list of notable museum ships around the world. This includes "ships preserved in museums" defined broadly

    List of museum ships

    List_of_museum_ships

  • Whaling in Chile
  • Commercial hunting of whales in Chile

    the success went unmatched. In 1914, he set out from San Pedro with a factory ship, Sobraon, and two catchers to hunt humpbacks along the coast from Chile

    Whaling in Chile

    Whaling_in_Chile

  • Alan Villiers
  • Australian author, adventurer, photographer & mariner (1903–1982)

    when the great explorer and whaler Carl Anton Larsen and his whaling factory ship, the Sir James Clark Ross came to port with five whale chasers in tow

    Alan Villiers

    Alan Villiers

    Alan_Villiers

  • Sinking of Dalniy Vostok
  • 2015 maritime incident in the Sea of Okhotsk

    whaling factory ship, and had international number IMO 8730429. The vessel was constructed as Stende (named for the city of Stende, Latvia) by the ship builders

    Sinking of Dalniy Vostok

    Sinking_of_Dalniy_Vostok

  • FV Athena
  • Athena was a 7,805 GT factory ship which was built in 1992. In October 2010, she caught fire off the Isles of Scilly. In May 2011 she caught fire while

    FV Athena

    FV Athena

    FV_Athena

  • Shuyak Island
  • Island in the Kodiak Archipelago, Alaska, U.S.

    at Port William, but that industry has declined with the advent of factory ships. Islands by land area: United Nations Environmental Programme Shuyak

    Shuyak Island

    Shuyak Island

    Shuyak_Island

  • Hektor Station
  • Abandoned whaling station in Antarctica

    and rusted", is still a prominent feature. Hektor Station in 1912. The factory ship Hektoria (I) is in the background. The Hektor Station cemetery in 1922

    Hektor Station

    Hektor Station

    Hektor_Station

  • Søren Berntsen
  • the South Sandwich Islands. Arriving in the islands with the floating factory ship Bucentaur, Berntsen established the shore station at Husvik in 1910,

    Søren Berntsen

    Søren_Berntsen

  • Charles Lester Kerr
  • British naval officer and submarine commander

    including Alfred Ehrenreich, with the intention of using the vessel as a factory ship to catch and process sharks in Australia. In 1930 he was arrested and

    Charles Lester Kerr

    Charles_Lester_Kerr

  • Chionis Island
  • Island in the Palmer Archipelago

    whalers because the Minerva, one of the whale catchers of the British factory ship Pythia, went aground on these rocks in March 1922. The catcher was abandoned

    Chionis Island

    Chionis_Island

  • List of ships built by Harland & Wolff (1930–2002)
  • MV Thorshavet, whale factory ship for A/S Thor Dahl Ltd, launched 19 June 1947, completed 9 October 1947. Pretoria Castle, passenger ship for Union Castle

    List of ships built by Harland & Wolff (1930–2002)

    List_of_ships_built_by_Harland_&_Wolff_(1930–2002)

  • HMS Belfast
  • Town-class light cruiser of the Royal Navy

    neutral Norwegian factory ship that was sailing in company with six whaling ships. On 8 October the ship sighted the Swedish merchant ship C. P. Lilljevach

    HMS Belfast

    HMS Belfast

    HMS_Belfast

  • List of Charlie and the Chocolate Factory characters
  • Cast of franchise inspired by Roald Dahl

    Chocolate Factory, his 1972 sequel book Charlie and the Great Glass Elevator, and the former's film adaptations, Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory (1971)

    List of Charlie and the Chocolate Factory characters

    List of Charlie and the Chocolate Factory characters

    List_of_Charlie_and_the_Chocolate_Factory_characters

  • SS Lancing
  • Shipwreck in Dare County, North Carolina

    SS Lancing was a Norwegian whale factory ship, originally the British merchant ship Knight Errant. The ship passed through a number of owners, being named

    SS Lancing

    SS Lancing

    SS_Lancing

  • List of fictional ships
  • Pocahontas – The Good Soldier by Ford Madox Ford, 1915 Polar Star – Soviet factory ship in Polar Star by Martin Cruz Smith, 1989 SS Poseidon – ocean liner (based

    List of fictional ships

    List_of_fictional_ships

  • Marine navigation
  • Process of steering a ship from a starting point to a destination

    of ships. For example, in deep-sea fishing, which locates its prey with sophisticated means and lasts indefinitely in time — freezer ships or factory ships

    Marine navigation

    Marine navigation

    Marine_navigation

  • San Clemente Island
  • Island of the Channel Islands in California, United States

    and 1930, and the latter between 1933 and 1937. In 1935, the Norwegian factory ship Esperanza caught blue whales as far north as San Clemente Island. The

    San Clemente Island

    San Clemente Island

    San_Clemente_Island

  • Jasus paulensis
  • Species of crustacean

    several, largely unsuccessful, attempts to harvest the lobsters using factory ships. In the period 1950 to 1956, the spiny lobsters were harvested by the

    Jasus paulensis

    Jasus paulensis

    Jasus_paulensis

  • Z189 Shipyard
  • Vietnamese state-owned shipyard

    20, 2011. The Z189 factory, under the General Department of National Defence Industry yesterday launched the Truong Sa (Spratly) ship HQ-571 in Hai Phong

    Z189 Shipyard

    Z189 Shipyard

    Z189_Shipyard

  • Berntsen Ridge
  • became its first manager in 1910; later Master of SS Orwell, a whaling factory ship.  This article incorporates public domain material from "Berntsen Ridge"

    Berntsen Ridge

    Berntsen_Ridge

  • York Factory
  • Trading post and settlement in Manitoba, Canada

    tried but was driven away by a larger English ship. In 1694, d'Iberville returned and captured York Factory with a show of force. He renamed it Fort Bourbon

    York Factory

    York Factory

    York_Factory

  • A-Factory
  • Building in Aomori, Japan

    Memorial Ship “Hakkōda-maru” Aomori Prefectural Route 18 "Shinmachi" "A-FACTORY". www.en-aomori.com. Retrieved 26 March 2018. Good Design Award A-FACTORY Website

    A-Factory

    A-Factory

    A-Factory

  • Babcock & Wilcox
  • American power technology company

    containment structure. The reactor is set to be manufactured in a factory, shipped by rail, then buried underground. On May 12, 2010, B&W announced that

    Babcock & Wilcox

    Babcock & Wilcox

    Babcock_&_Wilcox

  • Aircraft catapult
  • Device used to launch aircraft from ships

    United Whalers. Operating in the Antarctic, they were launched from the factory ship FF Balaena, which had been equipped with an ex-navy aircraft catapult

    Aircraft catapult

    Aircraft catapult

    Aircraft_catapult

  • Athena (disambiguation)
  • Topics referred to by the same term

    1980, sometimes mis-reported as Athena B FV Athena, a supertrawler and factory ship that caught fire in October 2010 SS Athena, a 1893 Greek steamship Athena

    Athena (disambiguation)

    Athena_(disambiguation)

  • Lancing Glacier
  • Glacier in Antarctica

    Flackwell), built in 1898, and converted to a whale factory ship in 1923. It was the first factory ship to be fitted with a slipway. List of glaciers in

    Lancing Glacier

    Lancing_Glacier

  • Jervis Bay
  • Oceanic bay in Jervis Bay Territory, New South Wales

    was a base for whaling in 1912 and 1913. The vessels involved were the factory ship Loch Tay and her two catchers Campbell and Sorrell. In 1915, the land

    Jervis Bay

    Jervis Bay

    Jervis_Bay

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FACTORY SHIP

Online names & meanings

  • Vetrivel
  • Boy/Male

    Hindu

    Vetrivel

    (Son of Parvati)

  • Ellithorpe
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Ellithorpe

    English : habitational name from an unidentified place, probably in Lincolnshire. The surname has died out in the British Isles but thrives in the U.S.This name is recorded in Ipswich, MA, in 1678, and the marriage of Mary Elithorp is recorded in Boston, MA, in 1727.

  • Mahrosh
  • Girl/Female

    Muslim/Islamic

    Mahrosh

    Piece of moon pleasant

  • Eimear
  • Girl/Female

    Australian, Celtic, Irish

    Eimear

    Connected to Irish Mythology

  • Lawrie
  • Boy/Male

    Latin

    Lawrie

    Of Laurentum. From the place of the laurel leaves. Can also be interpreted as the English...

  • Mihit
  • Boy/Male

    Hindu

    Mihit

    One of the names of Sun in indian mythology

  • Thayne
  • Boy/Male

    American, Anglo, Australian, British, Chinese, English

    Thayne

    Knight's Attendant; Follower; Land Holder

  • Sucheta
  • Boy/Male

    Hindu, Indian

    Sucheta

    Have Good Think; Faith

  • GAMLIYEL
  • Male

    Hebrew

    GAMLIYEL

    (גַּמְלִיאֵל) Hebrew name GAMLIYEL means "God is my reward." In the bible, this is the name of a leader of the tribe of Manasseh.

  • Hasib | حسیب
  • Boy/Male

    Muslim

    Hasib | حسیب

    Reckoned, Another name of prophet Muhammad

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FACTORY SHIP

  • Manufactory
  • n.

    A building or place where anything is manufactured; a factory.

  • Olfactories
  • pl.

    of Olfactory

  • Rectories
  • pl.

    of Rectory

  • Factories
  • pl.

    of Factory

  • Lactory
  • a.

    Lactiferous.

  • Factorial
  • a.

    Of or pertaining to a factory.

  • Victories
  • pl.

    of Victory

  • Olfactory
  • n.

    An olfactory organ; also, the sense of smell; -- usually in the plural.

  • Factory
  • n.

    The body of factors in any place; as, a chaplain to a British factory.

  • Factor
  • n.

    One who transacts business for another; an agent; a substitute; especially, a mercantile agent who buys and sells goods and transacts business for others in commission; a commission merchant or consignee. He may be a home factor or a foreign factor. He may buy and sell in his own name, and he is intrusted with the possession and control of the goods; and in these respects he differs from a broker.

  • Factoring
  • n.

    The act of resolving into factors.

  • Factory
  • n.

    A building, or collection of buildings, appropriated to the manufacture of goods; the place where workmen are employed in fabricating goods, wares, or utensils; a manufactory; as, a cotton factory.

  • Factor
  • v. t.

    To resolve (a quantity) into its factors.

  • Factory
  • n.

    A house or place where factors, or commercial agents, reside, to transact business for their employers.

  • Factored
  • imp. & p. p.

    of Factor

  • Shopman
  • n.

    One who works in a shop or a factory.

  • Factorship
  • n.

    The business of a factor.

  • Factoring
  • p. pr. & vb. n.

    of Factor

  • Proxenet
  • n.

    A negotiator; a factor.

  • Olfactory
  • a.

    Of, pertaining to, or connected with, the sense of smell; as, the olfactory nerves; the olfactory cells.