In all the vessels I have ever been on there has always been a locker near anchor compartment right in bow. It's supposedly safer up there.
Vessel" is a terms used in art, to describe a kind of sculpture that is formed like a container. In everyday life, "vessel" has wonderful connotations too. A vessel can be a means of traveling over the water - and thus by metaphor, of traveling over the sea of emotion. A vessel can be a kind of medium through which something creative and powerful can flow - as in a "vessel for the Holy Spirit." The Chalice on the altar is a vessel.
sonar is used, to steer a vessel because sound waves are emitted around the vessel. Then the sound waves are traveled back to the vessel. If the sound waves are block by an object, it will tell the vessel.
the vessel is called a artery
It is an artery.
That depends on what you mean by "vessel". Vessels on a vase could simply look like pictures of boats as decoration on a vase. Otherwise the meaning of vessel and vase is somewhat interchageable, vessel can mean bowl or tube so the term vessel is often used to describe a vase that is more pot-like in shape, or has a pot-like segment with a fluted top while "vase" in its specific sense is used to describe the very narrow tube-like structure people use to hold single flowers. As vessel also means tube-like structure (as in "blood vessel") it's possible that a vessel on a vase could be a a small tube coming from a larger vase designed to hold and pour liquid.
Water and a small amount of bleach are good for cleaning your vessel and they do not harm lakes or rivers. You can also purchase Simple Green or Fantastik Orange Action.
dorsal venous arch of hand
A still for producing alcohol and a reactor vessel for producing all sorts of other chemicals with antiseptic properties.
The organ that is responsible for carrying chemicals through the body is the heart. This is because the heart pumps the blood which carries chemicals and oxygen to all body parts.
for me as a nurse i prefer not to find the site,the best is to feel it...
any vessel 26 feet or longer
von Willebrand factor
Yes. It depends on the blood vessel and where it is, but yes a rupture to a blood vessel can kill you. A blood vessel is more likely to "pop" or rupture if it has an aneurysm, which is a local weakness where the blood vessel has stretched from the pressure of the blood. This is more likely to result in death if it is in a large blood vessel or in a critical location, such as the aorta or a vessel in the brain.
That could be either a ketch or a yawl, depending on location of the wheelhouse.
Removing a broken blood vessel depends on its size and location. Surgical intervention include ligation in cases of medium to large vessels. Oftentimes, blood removal is sufficient to treat a bleeding blood vessel.
The Ford Transit T300 was produced from the years 1965 to present. The location of the radiator expansion vessel in a Ford Transit T300 is next to the radiator.
Yes, an embolism is the sudden blockage of a blood vessel by an embolus. The embolism is often named for the causative factor, such as an air embolism or a fat embolism or its location, such as pulmonary embolism.