Trawl Resistant Sensor Mount Sutherland, Alexander L.; A trawl resistant sensor mount which is resistant to trawler damage and to http://www.devileye.net/catalog/techniques_guide_optical_signals/trawl_resistant
Extractions: Sutherland, Alexander L.; A trawl resistant sensor mount which is resistant to trawler damage and to psetting. A sensor is held by a strong net which anchors the sensor to an anchor. A float having a streamlined shape encases the sensor and maintains it upright. An electromechanical cable of sufficient weight to bury itself in the seafloor is attached to the sensor by an underwater connector, and is mechanically terminated to the anchor. BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION For oceanographic applications sensors of various types are often mounted on the seafloor. In shallow waters such as the continental shelf where extensive trawl fishing is carried on these sensors are often entangled in the trawl nets. Also these sensors are subject to being knocked down or upset by wave or current induced forces. Accordingly, the present invention provides a trawl resistant sensor mount which is resistant to trawler damage and to upsetting. A sensor is held by a strong net which anchors the sensor to an anchor. A float having a streamlined shape encases the sensor and maintains it upright. An electromechanical cable of sufficient weight to bury itself in the seafloor is attached to the sensor by an underwater connector, and is mechanically terminated to the anchor.
Extractions: Web Moving Images Texts Audio ... Additional Collections Search: All Media Types Wayback Machine Moving Images Community Video Ephemeral Films Movies Sports Videos Videogame Videos Vlogs Youth Media Texts American Libraries Canadian Libraries Universal Library Community Texts Project Gutenberg Biodiversity Heritage Library Children's Library Additional Collections Audio Community Audio Grateful Dead Live Music Archive Netlabels Non-English Audio Radio Programs Software CLASP Tucows Software Library CD Bulletin Board Software archive Education Math Lectures from MSRI Chinese University Lectures AP Courses from MITE MIT OpenCourseWare UChannel Forums FAQs Advanced Search Anonymous User login or join us Upload Ebook and Texts Archive University of Toronto - Robarts Library The achievements of the Knights of Malta (~366 pg) Read Online (31.2 M) PDF (~366 pg) EPUB (~366 pg) Kindle (~366 pg) Daisy (602.8 K)
Centre For Information Studies - Charles Sturt University Sutherland, Alexander. 9, 35 (July 1884) 362. 317 Bonwick, James. First twenty years of Australia a history founded on official documents. http://www.csu.edu.au/faculty/educat/sis/CIS/mri/review.html
Extractions: 7, 28 (Oct 1882) 461-463. Andrew, H.M. and Pirani, F.J. (eds). Euclid: Books I-III. See Euclid. Archer, William Henry. The position of Catholics in Victoria in relation to public instruction. Melbourne: George Robertson, 1884. Sutherland, Alexander. 9, 36 (Oct 1884) 478-480. Bagehot, Walter. Economic studies. London: Longmans, n.d. Martin, Arthur Patchett. 5, 18 (Apr 1880) 211-213. Bain, Alexander. John Stuart Mill: a criticism: with personal recollections. n.i. 7, 27 (July 1882) 349-350. Barrett, J.W. Typhoid fever in Victoria. n.i. "W.S." 8, 32 (Oct 1883) 471-472. [Baxter, A.B.]. Banking in Australasia from a London official's point of view. London: Blades; Melbourne: Sands and M'Dougall, [1883] Turner, Henry Gyles. 8, 32 (Oct 1883) 464-466.
Alexander Sutherland I have estimated that my ancestor Alexander was born around 1743 in Scotland. We have informal family history that Alexander was a British soldier who joined the Americans http://boswellfarms.com/Alexander.html
Extractions: I have estimated that my ancestor Alexander was born around 1743 in Scotland. We have informal family history that Alexander was a British soldier who joined the Americans sometime after the famous battle of 1775 at Breeds (Bunker) Hill in Boston, where his friend on the right was felled with two bullets and his friend on the left with a single shot. Other than this, we know essentially nothing about him. After the war he was reported to have lived in Wythe County VA with the Cloyds and McGavock families. He married Margaret Elizabeth Bryant (Bryan?) and one of his ten children was Joseph Alexander born July 9, 1788. Alexander was a successful farmer and acquired a lot of land. Many generations stayed in the corner area of VA, TN, and NC. These families are noted in Cox's "Footprints in the Sands of Time". My Grandfather (with his daughter-my Mother) left Mountain City, TN in mid 1930's. For additonal info about this area, goto
Www.cursiter.com Mother Bell SUTHERLAND . Alexander BAIN (M) .. http://www.cursiter.com/txt-exe-files/Bain.txt
LOST LORDSHIP OF DUFFUS LOST LORDSHIP OF DUFFUS By Nigel Tranter. T HE Laigh of Moray, the rich alluvial plain which lies between the great mountain mass of the Monadh Ruadh, or the Cairngorms, and http://www.duffus.com/lost.htm
Extractions: By Nigel Tranter T HE Laigh of Moray, the rich alluvial plain which lies between the great mountain mass of the Monadh Ruadh, or the Cairngorms, and the northern sea, has been called both the Granary and the Garden of Scotland, on account of its great fertility and the salubrity of its climate. In the midst of this Eden is a smaller, area of about four miles square, a par- ish which itself is known as the Heart of Moray, not so much on account of its geographical centrality as because of its surpassing fertility and richness. And in the very centre of this creme de la creme, rises out of the luxurious, fecund and teeming black soil, a green mound. From this thrust up jagged fangs of ancient masonrythe Castle of Duffus. Duffus of the Duffuses! The name is presumed to signify, in the Gaelic, Dubh-uis, the Black Water, and no doubt it takes us back to the days when the nearby Loch of Spynie was more than five miles long, and all this area was in the thrall of water seeping, creeping, lapping water laying down the deep, dark basis for the subsequent amazing fertility. But it was more the surname than the place name which interested me. For the name of Duffus is but little heard of, little known, in Scotland. To have sprung from the very quin-tessence of the land's richness, and yet to have made so little impact on our country and history, struck me as strange. Especially when considered in conjunction with that famous picture, so often reproduced as the authentic and authoritative representation of Highland dress at the height of its magnificencethe portrait, full-length and colourful, of Kenneth, third Lord Duffus.