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  2. The Fishing Boat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Fishing_Boat

    The work was one of a series of 35 oil paintings that Courbet produced in quick succession during the fall of 1865. Unlike many other marine paintings of that time, the boat is the central feature of the composition rather than a minor element. The Fishing Boat was the first work by Courbet to enter the Met's collection when it was acquired in ...

  3. Cutting mat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cutting_mat

    Cutting mat. A cutting mat is a mat that is placed between a workpiece to be cut and the surface below (e.g. a table) to protect the surface. They are used, amongst other things, in hobby work for precise and clean cuts of paper, cardboard or textiles using a scalpel or rotary cutter. They often have grids with a line every 5 or 10 millimeter ...

  4. Margaret Jane - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Margaret_Jane

    Collision and sinking. On July 31, 1980, Margaret Jane was returning an injured crew member to Lunenburg after three days of scallop fishing with an 18-member crew. Cape Beaver, a steel-plated 160-foot wetfish trawler owned by National Sea Products, was undergoing her first shakedown cruise in Nova Scotia waters and had dignitaries on board.

  5. Trawling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trawling

    Setting a trawl. Trawling is an industrial method of fishing that involves pulling a fishing net, that is heavily weighted to keep it on the seafloor, through the water behind one or more boats. The net used for trawling is called a trawl. This principle requires netting bags which are towed through water to catch different species of fishes or ...

  6. Dogger (boat) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dogger_(boat)

    Dogger (boat) The dogger ( Dutch pronunciation: [dɔɣər]) was a group of similar fishing boats, described as early as the fourteenth century, that commonly operated in the North Sea. Early examples were single-masted: by the seventeenth century, two-masted dogger s were common. They were largely used for fishing for cod by rod and line.

  7. Shetland bus boats - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shetland_bus_boats

    Shetland bus boats. The Shetland bus was the name given to a clandestine special operations group that made a permanent link between Shetland, Scotland, and German-occupied Norway. From mid-1941 until the end of the war it operated a number of vessels, mostly Norwegian fishing boats. [1]