View allAll Photos Tagged icebreakers
Ph.D. candidate Andrew Fortt prepares to test ice strength with a multi-axial loading system in Professor Erland Schulson’s lab.
This photo appeared in "Lab Reports" in the Spring 2005 issue of Dartmouth Engineer magazine.
Photo by Douglas Fraser.
Icebreaker "Tarmo" initial was built in 1963 in Finland. In 1993 it was sold to Estonia.
Photos: July 18, 2010 in Tallinn
Tonnage: 3916 GRT
Length: 84,5m
Power: 10120 kWt
Speed: 15.5 knots
From Wikipedia: "USCGC Mackinaw (WAGB-83) is a 290-foot (88 m) former Coast Guard icebreaker on exhibit as a museum ship at the Ice Breaker Mackinaw Maritime Museum in Mackinaw City, Michigan. The vessel has been known as the 'Queen of the Great Lakes' and 'The Largest Icebreaker on the Great Lakes'... Decommissioned 10 June 2006."
See More: My Mackinaw City page.
Attendees fill out Ice Breaker tags. Each tag is a name tag that contains a common question associated with the event theme. Everyone answers the question in their own way, and reading others answers prompts conversation and connection.
Built in Newcastle-on-Tynes in 1907, Tarmo was Finland's third icebreaker, coming after Murtaja (1889) and Sampo (1898). She could crush 80cms ice.
She was built at Armstrong Whitworth's shipyard.
Kanga Cup Referee Youth Academy 2013 - Saturday Arrival
All photos are © Paul Smith 2013 unless otherwise specified. Limited permission granted for non-commercial reproduction (eg. Facebook).