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{{Short description|Floating structure or device}} |
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{{redirect|Buoys|the band|The Buoys}} |
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{{About||the French commune|Bouy|the Norwegian island|Buøy|other uses}} |
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[[File:Lateral Buoy.jpg|thumb|Smart buoy with [[solar panel]]s, [[LED light]], and [[corner reflector]]s for [[radar]]]] |
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{{multiple image |
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| image1 = Canbuoy11.jpg |
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| width1 = 165 |
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| alt1 = Green Can #11 |
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| caption1 = Green can #11 near the mouth of the [[Saugatuck River]] (IALA region B). |
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| image2 = Can_11_in_Saugatuck_river.jpg |
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| width2 = 88 |
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| alt2 = Green Can #11 on Map |
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| caption2 = Green Can #11 on a [[nautical chart]] |
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}} |
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[[File:NOAA-NDBC-discus-buoy.jpg|thumb|upright|[[NOAA]] [[Weather buoy]]]] |
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A '''buoy''' ({{IPAc-en|ˈ|b|ɔɪ|,_|b|uː|.|i}}; {{respell|boy|,_|BOO|ee}})<ref>{{cite Dictionary.com|buoy}}</ref><ref>{{cite American Heritage Dictionary|buoy}}</ref> is a [[buoyancy|float]]ing device that can have many purposes. It can be [[anchor]]ed (stationary) or allowed to drift with ocean currents. |
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[[Image:buoy_seal.jpg|thumb|A sea lion on navigational buoy #14 in San |
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Diego Harbor]] |
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==History== |
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[[Image:Canbuoy11.jpg|thumb|Green can #11 near the mouth of the [[Saugatuck river]].]] |
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[[Image:BUOY.JPG|thumb|Buoy for sailing races]] |
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The ultimate origin of buoys is unknown, but by 1295 a seaman's manual referred to navigation buoys in the [[Guadalquivir]] River in Spain.<ref>{{cite book|last=Naish|first=John|title=Seamarks, their history and development|place=London|publisher=Stanford Maritime|date=1985|isbn=0-540-07309-1 |page=51}}</ref> To the north there are early medieval mentions of the French / Belgian River [[Meuse|Maas]] being buoyed.{{sfn|Naish|1985|p=51}} Such early buoys were probably just timber beams or rafts, but in 1358 there is a record of a barrel buoy in the Dutch [[Maasmond]] (also known as the Maas Sluis or Maasgat).{{sfn|Naish|1985|p=51}} The simple barrel was difficult to secure to the seabed, and so a conical ''tonne'' was developed. They had a solid plug at the narrow end through which a mooring ring could be attached.{{sfn|Naish|1985|p=52}} By 1790 the older conical tonne was being replaced by a ''nun'' buoy. This had the same conical section below the waterline as the tonne buoy, but at the waterline a barrel shape was used to allow a truncated cone to be above the water. The whole was completed with a top mark.{{sfn|Naish|1985|loc=illustrations pp 53, 57}} In the nineteenth century iron buoys became available. They had watertight internal bulkheads and as well as topmarks and might have bells (1860) or whistles (1880).{{sfn|Naish|1985|p=59}} In 1879 [[Julius Pintsch]] obtained a patent for the illumination of buoys by using a compressed gas.{{sfn|Naish|1985|pp=59–60}} This was superseded from 1912 onwards by [[Gustaf Dalén]]'s [[Dalén light|acetylene lamp]]. This could be set to flash which ensured that buoys could be distinguished from ships' lights and from each other. A later development was the [[sun valve]] which shut off the gas during sunlight.{{sfn|Naish|1985|pp=65–66}} |
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A '''buoy''' is a [[float]]ing device that can have many different purposes, which determine whether the buoy is anchored (stationary) or allowed to drift. In Commonwealth English, the pronunciation is virtually identical to ''boy'' ({{IPA|[bɔɪ]}}), but in American English it is [[IPA for English|pronounced]] {{IPA|[ˈbu.i]}}. Canadian English, as in so many other cases, accepts both pronunciations. The term [[buoyancy]] comes from the same root, but is pronounced world-wide as in Commonwealth English. |
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==Types== |
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===Navigational buoys=== |
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* '''Race course marker buoys''' are used for buoy racing, the most prevalent form of [[yacht racing]] and power boat racing. They delimit the course and must be passed to a specified side. They are also used in [[underwater orienteering]] competitions. |
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* [[Emergency wreck buoy|'''Emergency wreck buoys''']] provide a clear and unambiguous means of temporarily marking new wrecks, typically for the first 24–72 hours. They are coloured in an equal number of blue and yellow vertical stripes and fitted with an alternating blue and yellow flashing light. They were implemented following collisions in the Dover Strait in 2002 when vessels struck the new wreck of the {{Ship|MV|Tricolor}}.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.trinityhouse.co.uk/lighthouses/buoys/emergency_wreck.html |title=Emergency Wreck Buoys | Navigation Buoys | Trinity House |access-date=2014-05-26 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140702032424/http://www.trinityhouse.co.uk/lighthouses/buoys/emergency_wreck.html |archive-date=2014-07-02 }}</ref> |
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* '''Ice marking buoys''' mark holes in frozen lakes and rivers so snowmobiles do not drive over the holes. |
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* '''Large Navigational Buoys''' (LNB, or [[Lanby buoy|'''Lanby buoys''']]) are automatic buoys over 10 meters high equipped with a powerful light monitored electronically as a replacement for a [[lightvessel]].<ref>{{Cite web|title=Large Navigational Buoys (LNB)|url=http://www.uscg.mil/history/articles/LNB.asp|publisher=United States Coast Guard|access-date=Jul 6, 2015}}</ref> They may be marked on charts as a "Superbuoy."<ref name=":0">{{Cite book|title=US Chart No. 1|author=National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration|publisher=NOAA|year=2013|location=Silver Spring|pages=89}}</ref> |
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* [[Navigational aid#Lateral marker|'''Lateral marker''']] '''buoys''' |
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* '''[[Safe water mark]]''' or [[Fairway Buoy|'''fairway buoys''']] mark the entrance to a channel or nearby landfall |
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* [[Sea mark|'''Sea marks''']] aid [[pilotage]] by marking a [[Shipping|maritime]] channel, hazard or administrative area to allow [[boat]]s and [[ship]]s to [[navigate]] safely. Some are fitted with wave-activated bells or gongs. |
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* '''Wreck buoys''' mark a wrecked ship to warn other ships to keep away because of unseen hazards. |
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* [[wikt:light buoy|'''Light buoys''']] provide demarcation at night. |
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=== Marker buoys === |
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Buoys are often used to temporarily or permanently mark the positions of underwater objects: |
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* '''Lobster trap buoys''' are brightly colored buoys marking lobster trap locations so [[lobster fishing|lobster fishers]] can find their lobster traps. Each fisher has a unique colour marking or registration number. They are allowed to haul only their own traps, and must display their buoy colour or license number on their boat so law enforcement officials know what they should be hauling. The buoys are brightly coloured with highly visible numbers so they can be seen in poor visibility conditions like [[rain]], [[fog]] and [[sea smoke]].<ref>Cobb, John N., [http://www.gutenberg.org/files/17475/17475-h/17475-h.htm#7 "The Lobster Fishery of Maine"], Bulletin of the United States Fish Commission, Vol. 19, Pages 241–265, 1899; from [[Project Gutenberg]]</ref><ref>Taft, Hank; Taft, Jan, [http://www.mainecoastguide.com/ ''A Cruising Guide to the Maine Coast and the Maine Coast Guides for Small Boats''], Peaks Island, Maine : Diamond Pass Publishing, 5th Edition, 2009. Cf. Chapter: [http://www.mainecoastguide.com/sidebars/buoys.html "BUOY, OH BUOY"] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081118013143/http://www.mainecoastguide.com/sidebars/buoys.html |date=2008-11-18 }}, and Chapter: [http://www.mainecoastguide.com/intro/fshrmn.html "Fisherman, Lobsterboats, and Working Harbors"] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120320212945/http://www.mainecoastguide.com/intro/fshrmn.html |date=2012-03-20 }}</ref> |
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* '''[[Fishing float]]s''' are a type of lightweight buoys used in [[angling]] to mark the position of the [[fishing bait|bait]]ed [[fish hook|hook]] suspended underneath, and as a [[bite indicator]] to signal the angler any changes in the hook's underwater status. |
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==== Diving ==== |
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Several types of marker buoys may be used by [[Underwater diving|divers]]: |
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* [[Decompression buoy|'''Decompression buoys''']] are deployed by submerged [[Scuba diving|SCUBA]] divers to mark their position underwater whilst doing [[decompression stops]] |
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* [[Diving shot|'''Shot buoys''']] mark dive sites for the boat safety cover of [[scuba divers]] so they can descend to dive sites more easily in conditions of low visibility or [[tide|tidal currents]] and more safely do [[decompression stops]] on their ascents. |
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* [[Surface marker buoy|'''Surface marker buoys''']] are taken on dives by [[scuba divers]] to mark their positions underwater.<ref name=Davies>{{cite journal |author=Davies, D |title=Diver location devices |journal=Journal of the [[South Pacific Underwater Medicine Society]] |volume=28 |issue=3 |year=1998 |url=http://archive.rubicon-foundation.org/5968 |access-date=2013-04-16 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090519022556/http://archive.rubicon-foundation.org/5968 |archive-date=2009-05-19 |url-status=usurped }}</ref> |
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* '''Dive site demarcation buoys''' indicate that divers are working in the marked area, to warn passing vessels to stay clear. |
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=== Rescue === |
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* [[Lifebuoy|'''Lifebuoys''']] are lifesaving buoys thrown to people in the water to provide [[buoyancy]]. They usually have a connected line allowing them to be pulled in. |
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* [[Self-locating datum marker buoy|'''Self-locating datum marker buoys''']] (SLDMB) are 70% scale Coastal Ocean Dynamics Experiment (CODE)/Davis-style oceanographic surface drifters with drogue vanes between 30 and 100 cm deep,<ref name="METOCEAN">[METOCEAN. (2008). METOCEAN SLDMB: Operating & Maintenance Manual (Version 3.0 ed.) Retrieved from http://www.metocean.com.</ref> designed for deployment from [[U.S. Coast Guard]] vessels or airframes for search and rescue. They have very little surface area above water to minimize [[leeway|the effects]] on them off winds and waves.<ref name="Bang">[Bang, I., Mooers, C. N. K., Haus, B., Turner, C., Lewandowski, M. (2007). Technical Report: Surface Drifter Advection and Dispersion in the Florida Current Between Key West and Jacksonville, Florida. Technical Report.].</ref> |
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* [[Rescue buoy (submarine)|'''Submarine rescue buoys''']] are released in emergencies and for communication purposes. |
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=== Research === |
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* '''[[Profiling buoy]]s''' are specialized buoys that adjust their buoyancy to sink at a controlled rate to a set depth, for example 2,000 metres while measuring sea temperature and salinity. After a certain period, typically 10 days, they return to the surface, transmit their data via satellite, then sink again.<ref name=Kery1989>{{cite journal |author=Kery, SM |title=Diving in support of buoy engineering: The RTEAM project |journal=In: Lang, MA; Jaap, WC (Ed). Diving for Science...1989. Proceedings of the American Academy of Underwater Sciences Annual Scientific Diving Symposium 28 September – 1 October 1989 Wood Hole Oceanographic Institution, Woods Hole, Massachusetts, USA |year=1989 |url=http://archive.rubicon-foundation.org/10199 |access-date=2013-04-16 |archive-date=2013-06-21 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130621195811/http://archive.rubicon-foundation.org/xmlui/handle/123456789/10199 |url-status=usurped }}</ref> See [[Argo (oceanography)]]. |
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* [[Deep-ocean Assessment and Reporting of Tsunamis|'''Tsunami buoys''']] are anchored buoys that can detect sudden changes in undersea water pressure, and are a component of [[tsunami warning systems]] in the [[Pacific Tsunami Warning Center]] and Indian Oceans. |
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* [[Wave buoy|'''Wave buoys''']] measure the movement of the water surface as a wave train. The data they transmit is analysed to form statistics like [[significant wave height]] and period, and wave direction. |
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* [[Weather buoy|'''Weather buoys''']] measure weather parameters such as air temperature, barometric pressure, and wind speed and direction. They transmit this data, via satellite radio links such as the purpose-built [[Argos System]] or commercial [[satellite phone]] networks, to meteorological centres for forecasting and climate study. They may be anchored (moored buoys), or allowed to drift (drifting buoys) in the open currents. Their position is calculated by the satellite. They are also referred to as [[Ocean Data Acquisition System]]s, or (ODAS) buoys.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.iala-aism.org/wiki/dictionary/index.php/ODAS_buoy|title=International Dictionary of Marine Aids to Navigation – ODAS buoy|last=IALA|date=2008|access-date=10 December 2016}}</ref> and may be marked on charts as "Superbuoys."<ref name=":0" /> |
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=== Mooring === |
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* '''Mooring buoys''' keep one end of a [[mooring]] cable or chain on the water's surface so [[ship]]s and boats can tie to them. Many [[marina]]s mark them with numbers and assign them to particular vessels, or rent them to transient vessels. |
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* '''Tripping buoys''' are used to keep one end of a '{{nautical term|tripping line}}' to be used to break out and lift an anchor on the water's surface so that a stuck [[anchor]] can more easily be freed. |
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=== Military === |
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* '''Marker buoys''', used in [[naval warfare]] (particularly [[anti-submarine warfare]]) emit light and/or smoke using [[pyrotechnic]] devices to create the [[flare]] and [[smoke]]. Commonly 3 inches (76 mm) in diameter and about 20 inches (500 mm) long, they are activated by contact with seawater and float on the surface. Some extinguish themselves after a specific period, while others are sunk when they are no longer needed. |
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* [[Sonobuoy|'''Sonobuoys''']] are used by [[anti-submarine warfare]] aircraft to detect [[submarine]]s by [[SONAR]]. |
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* '''Target buoys''' simulate targets, such as small boats, in live-fire exercises by naval and coastal forces. They are usually targeted by medium-sized weapons such as [[heavy machine gun]]s, rapid fire cannons (~20 mm), [[autocannon]]s (up to 40–57 mm) and [[anti-tank rockets]]. |
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===Specific forms=== |
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* '''DAN buoys''' are used as: |
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** Large maritime [[navigation]]al aids providing a platform for [[light]] and [[radio]] beacons |
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** Lifebuoys with flags, used on [[yacht]]s and smaller pleasure craft |
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** Temporary markers in [[Danish seine]] fishing to mark net anchor positions |
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** Temporary markers set by [[danlayer]]s during minesweeping operations to indicate the boundaries of swept paths, swept areas, known hazards, and other locations or reference points |
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** Temporary markers for [[man overboard|rescue operations]] |
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* [[Spar buoy|'''Spar buoys''']] are tall, thin buoys that float upright, e.g. [[R/P FLIP]] |
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===Other=== |
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[[File:Arrival Polar.jpg|thumb|buoy with [[letter box]] in [[Töre]]<ref>RCC Pilotage Foundation: ''Baltic Sea and Approaches''. Imray, Laurie, Norie and Wilson Ltd, 2019, [https://books.google.com/books?id=ZeqKDwAAQBAJ&pg=PA241 p. 241], ISBN 9781846238925.</ref>]] |
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* Letter boxes on buoys exist in [[Töre]] (Sweden) and at the [[Steinhuder Meer]] (Germany)<ref>[https://www.steinhude-am-meer.de/f5-edit/?domain=www.steinhude-am-meer.de&show=detail&artikel=20 ''Die Postboje''], www.steinhude-am-meer.de.</ref> |
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===Fictional=== |
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* Imaginary '''"Mail buoys"''' have been used as a [[prank]] in the US Navy when a new sailor may be given the task of locating one to retrieve non-existent mail.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.ussrich.org/news/pranks.html|title=Pranks: Some old, some new|publisher=USS RICH Association|website=USS RICH}}</ref> |
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* '''Space buoys''', a feature in some science fiction stories which are stationary objects in [[outer space]] that provide navigation data or warnings.{{citation needed|date=March 2021}} |
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==Other uses== |
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* The word "buoyed" can also be used figuratively. For example, a person can buoy up ('lift up') someone's spirits by providing help and empathy.<ref>{{cite OED2|buoy|volume=II|page=661}} verb, sense 3.</ref> |
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* Buoys are used in some [[wave power]] systems to generate electrical power.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Buoy System Harnesses Wave Energy |url=https://abcnews.go.com/Technology/CuttingEdge/story?id=98434&page=1 |access-date=2023-09-25 |website=ABC News |language=en}}</ref> |
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* [[George A. Stephen]], founder of [[Weber-Stephen Products Co.]], invented the kettle grill by cutting a metal buoy in half and fashioning a [[dome]] shaped grill to it with a rounded lid.<ref>[http://weber.mediaroom.com/index.php?s=pageA&item=1 George Stephen, Company Founder and Inventor of the Weber Kettle Grill] {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070623131242/http://weber.mediaroom.com/index.php?s=pageA&item=1 |date=June 23, 2007 }}</ref> |
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==Gallery== |
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<gallery> |
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File:NorderneyBojen.JPG|Several different buoys at a storage depot. |
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File:BUOY.JPG|A buoy used as turn marker for sailing races. |
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File:Iron Buoys Great Barrier Island.jpg|Old iron buoys, most likely for mooring. |
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File:C0660-NN-Volga-Bridge.jpg|Children playing on a buoy in the [[Volga]] |
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File:Surface Buoys (Recycled).png|Recycled surface buoys |
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File:Boa spiaggiata.jpg|A buoy beached at [[Sebastian Inlet State Park]]. |
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File:Telephone buoy of HMS Nordkaparen (Nor).JPG|Emergency buoy of the Swedish submarine ''Nordkaparen'' |
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File:Gas buoy stranded on land by hurricane.jpg|Gas buoy stranded on land after [[1915 Galveston Hurricane]], near Texas City, Texas |
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File:Boya Buoy.jpg|Starboard lateral Buoy ([[Lateral mark]] - Region B - [[IALA]] ) as Channel Marker Buoy at "Río de la Plata" river, [[Buenos Aires]], Argentina |
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File:Envirtech Tsunami Buoy MKIII.jpg|Tsunami buoy before deployment in Andaman Sea |
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File:Lobster buoys.jpg|Lobster buoys hanging on a tree, Sprucehead Island, Maine, United States |
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File:Buoyyard.jpg|Buoys in dry storage, Homer, Alaska |
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File:SVP-B.jpg|Drifting Buoy fitted with a Barometer |
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File:Ship1258 - Flickr - NOAA Photo Library.jpg|Buoy undergoing repair |
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File:Ring buoy with light.jpg|Ring life buoy with a light on a cruise ship |
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File:Whitby Warning Buoy.jpg|North cardinal buoy off the coast of [[Whitby]], [[North Yorkshire]] |
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File:Null Island 2017.jpg|The weather buoy moored at the coordinates of [[Null Island]], located at 0°N 0°E |
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File:Mr-2s.jpg|Ice-resistant buoys MR-2S and N-2 at a playground in Tallinn, Estonia |
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</gallery> |
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* [[sea mark]] - aids [[pilotage]] by marking a [[Shipping|maritime]] channel, hazard and administrative area to allow [[boat]]s and [[ship]]s to [[navigation|navigate]] safely. |
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* [[lifebuoy]] - a life saving buoy designed to be thrown to a person in the water to provide [[buoyancy]]. Usually has a connecting line allowing the casualty to be pulled to the rescuer |
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* [[Submarine]] communication buoy - to be released in case of emergencies or for communication |
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* Communication buoy for a bottom pressure sensor, for [[tsunami]] detection. |
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* DAN buoy - has two meanings: |
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** a large maritime [[navigation]]al aid providing a platform for [[light]] and [[radio]] beacons |
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** a lifebuoy with a flags used on [[yacht]]s and smaller pleasure craft |
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* [[Sonobuoy]] - used by [[anti-submarine warfare]] aircraft to detect [[submarine]]s by [[Sonar|SONAR]] |
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* [[Surface Marker Buoy]] - taken on dives by [[scuba diving|scuba divers]] to mark their position underwater |
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* [[Decompression buoy]] - deployed by submerged scuba divers to mark their position underwater whilst doing [[decompression stops]] |
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* [[Diving shot|shot buoy]] - used to mark dive sites for the boat safety cover of scuba divers so that the divers can descend to the dive site more easily in conditions of low visibility or [[tide|tidal currents]] and more safely do [[decompression stops]] on their ascent |
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* mooring buoy - to keep one end of a mooring cable or chain on the water's surface so that [[ship]]s or boats can tie on to it |
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* tripping buoy - to keep one end of the [[tripping line]] on the water's surface so that a stuck [[anchor]] can more easily be freed |
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* [http://www.jcommops.org/dbcp/ weather buoy] - equipped to measure weather parameters such as air temperature, barometric pressure, wind speed and direction and to report these data via [[Argos System|satellite radio links]] to meteorological centres for use in forecasting. May be anchored or allowed to drift in the open ocean currents. Data Buoys are coordinated internationally by Joint programmes between the World Meteorological Organisation and the Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission of UNESCO within the [http://www.jcommops.org/dbcp/ Data Buoy Cooperation Panel(DBCP)]. Position is calculated by the satellite. |
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* profiling buoy or [http://www.argo.net float] - specialised model which adjusts its buoyancy so that it will sink at a controlled rate to 2,000 metres below the surface while measuring sea temperatures and salinity. Then after typically 10 days it returns to the surface and transmits its data via satellite before sinking again. |
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* ice marking buoy - buoys for marking ice holes in frozen lakes and rivers, so that snowmobiles do not drive over the holes. |
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* a '''[[marker buoy]]''' used in [[naval warfare]], particularly [[anti-submarine warfare]], is a light-emitting or smoke-emitting, or both, marker using some kind of [[pyrotechnic]] to provide the [[Flare (pyrotechnic)|flare]] and [[smoke]]. It is commonly a 3-inch (76 mm) diameter device about 20 inches (500 mm) long that is set off by contact with seawater and floats on the surface. Some markers extinguish after a set period and others are made to sink. |
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== See also == |
== See also == |
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{{Portal|Transport}} |
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* [[lightvessel]] |
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{{div col}} |
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* [[lighthouse]] |
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* {{annotated link|Bowditch's American Practical Navigator|''Bowditch's American Practical Navigator''}} |
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* [[Thomas Willson]] |
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* {{annotated link|Buoy anti-tank obstacle}} |
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* {{annotated link|Buoyancy}} |
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* {{annotated link|Day beacon}} |
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* {{annotated link|GPS buoy}} |
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* {{annotated link|International Arctic Buoy Program}} |
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* {{annotated link|Lateral mark}} |
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* {{annotated link|Lighthouse}} |
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* {{annotated link|Lightship|aka=Lightvessel}} |
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* {{annotated link|List of lights}} |
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* {{annotated link|PowerBuoy}} |
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* {{annotated link|United States Coast Pilot|''United States Coast Pilot''}} |
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{{div col end}} |
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==References== |
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{{Reflist|30em}} |
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==External links== |
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{{Wiktionary}} |
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{{EB1911 poster|Buoy}} |
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{{Commons category|Buoys}} |
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* [https://web.archive.org/web/20101010154115/http://www.jcommops.org/dbcp/network/maps.html Global Buoy Network Maps] |
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* [http://www.cgate.co.il/eng/Seamanship/tafrit.htm Lighthouses and Buoys] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130124215440/http://cgate.co.il/eng/Seamanship/tafrit.htm |date=2013-01-24 }} |
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* [https://web.archive.org/web/20090907100035/http://buoyalerts.com/ North American Buoy Map] |
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{{Authority control}} |
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[[Category:Dutch loanwords]] |
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{{Seamanship}} |
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[[Category:Navigation]] |
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[[Category:Nautical terminology]] |
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[[da:Bøje]] |
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[[Category:Marine navigation]] |
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[[de:Boje]] |
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[[ |
[[Category:Buoyage| ]] |
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[[Category:Maritime safety]] |
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[[pl:Boja]] |
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[[ru:Буй (поплавок)]] |
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[[sv:Boj]] |
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[[uk:Буй]] |
Latest revision as of 07:19, 9 September 2024
A buoy (/ˈbɔɪ, buː.i/; boy, BOO-ee)[1][2] is a floating device that can have many purposes. It can be anchored (stationary) or allowed to drift with ocean currents.
History
[edit]The ultimate origin of buoys is unknown, but by 1295 a seaman's manual referred to navigation buoys in the Guadalquivir River in Spain.[3] To the north there are early medieval mentions of the French / Belgian River Maas being buoyed.[4] Such early buoys were probably just timber beams or rafts, but in 1358 there is a record of a barrel buoy in the Dutch Maasmond (also known as the Maas Sluis or Maasgat).[4] The simple barrel was difficult to secure to the seabed, and so a conical tonne was developed. They had a solid plug at the narrow end through which a mooring ring could be attached.[5] By 1790 the older conical tonne was being replaced by a nun buoy. This had the same conical section below the waterline as the tonne buoy, but at the waterline a barrel shape was used to allow a truncated cone to be above the water. The whole was completed with a top mark.[6] In the nineteenth century iron buoys became available. They had watertight internal bulkheads and as well as topmarks and might have bells (1860) or whistles (1880).[7] In 1879 Julius Pintsch obtained a patent for the illumination of buoys by using a compressed gas.[8] This was superseded from 1912 onwards by Gustaf Dalén's acetylene lamp. This could be set to flash which ensured that buoys could be distinguished from ships' lights and from each other. A later development was the sun valve which shut off the gas during sunlight.[9]
Types
[edit]Navigational buoys
[edit]- Race course marker buoys are used for buoy racing, the most prevalent form of yacht racing and power boat racing. They delimit the course and must be passed to a specified side. They are also used in underwater orienteering competitions.
- Emergency wreck buoys provide a clear and unambiguous means of temporarily marking new wrecks, typically for the first 24–72 hours. They are coloured in an equal number of blue and yellow vertical stripes and fitted with an alternating blue and yellow flashing light. They were implemented following collisions in the Dover Strait in 2002 when vessels struck the new wreck of the MV Tricolor.[10]
- Ice marking buoys mark holes in frozen lakes and rivers so snowmobiles do not drive over the holes.
- Large Navigational Buoys (LNB, or Lanby buoys) are automatic buoys over 10 meters high equipped with a powerful light monitored electronically as a replacement for a lightvessel.[11] They may be marked on charts as a "Superbuoy."[12]
- Lateral marker buoys
- Safe water mark or fairway buoys mark the entrance to a channel or nearby landfall
- Sea marks aid pilotage by marking a maritime channel, hazard or administrative area to allow boats and ships to navigate safely. Some are fitted with wave-activated bells or gongs.
- Wreck buoys mark a wrecked ship to warn other ships to keep away because of unseen hazards.
- Light buoys provide demarcation at night.
Marker buoys
[edit]Buoys are often used to temporarily or permanently mark the positions of underwater objects:
- Lobster trap buoys are brightly colored buoys marking lobster trap locations so lobster fishers can find their lobster traps. Each fisher has a unique colour marking or registration number. They are allowed to haul only their own traps, and must display their buoy colour or license number on their boat so law enforcement officials know what they should be hauling. The buoys are brightly coloured with highly visible numbers so they can be seen in poor visibility conditions like rain, fog and sea smoke.[13][14]
- Fishing floats are a type of lightweight buoys used in angling to mark the position of the baited hook suspended underneath, and as a bite indicator to signal the angler any changes in the hook's underwater status.
Diving
[edit]Several types of marker buoys may be used by divers:
- Decompression buoys are deployed by submerged SCUBA divers to mark their position underwater whilst doing decompression stops
- Shot buoys mark dive sites for the boat safety cover of scuba divers so they can descend to dive sites more easily in conditions of low visibility or tidal currents and more safely do decompression stops on their ascents.
- Surface marker buoys are taken on dives by scuba divers to mark their positions underwater.[15]
- Dive site demarcation buoys indicate that divers are working in the marked area, to warn passing vessels to stay clear.
Rescue
[edit]- Lifebuoys are lifesaving buoys thrown to people in the water to provide buoyancy. They usually have a connected line allowing them to be pulled in.
- Self-locating datum marker buoys (SLDMB) are 70% scale Coastal Ocean Dynamics Experiment (CODE)/Davis-style oceanographic surface drifters with drogue vanes between 30 and 100 cm deep,[16] designed for deployment from U.S. Coast Guard vessels or airframes for search and rescue. They have very little surface area above water to minimize the effects on them off winds and waves.[17]
- Submarine rescue buoys are released in emergencies and for communication purposes.
Research
[edit]- Profiling buoys are specialized buoys that adjust their buoyancy to sink at a controlled rate to a set depth, for example 2,000 metres while measuring sea temperature and salinity. After a certain period, typically 10 days, they return to the surface, transmit their data via satellite, then sink again.[18] See Argo (oceanography).
- Tsunami buoys are anchored buoys that can detect sudden changes in undersea water pressure, and are a component of tsunami warning systems in the Pacific Tsunami Warning Center and Indian Oceans.
- Wave buoys measure the movement of the water surface as a wave train. The data they transmit is analysed to form statistics like significant wave height and period, and wave direction.
- Weather buoys measure weather parameters such as air temperature, barometric pressure, and wind speed and direction. They transmit this data, via satellite radio links such as the purpose-built Argos System or commercial satellite phone networks, to meteorological centres for forecasting and climate study. They may be anchored (moored buoys), or allowed to drift (drifting buoys) in the open currents. Their position is calculated by the satellite. They are also referred to as Ocean Data Acquisition Systems, or (ODAS) buoys.[19] and may be marked on charts as "Superbuoys."[12]
Mooring
[edit]- Mooring buoys keep one end of a mooring cable or chain on the water's surface so ships and boats can tie to them. Many marinas mark them with numbers and assign them to particular vessels, or rent them to transient vessels.
- Tripping buoys are used to keep one end of a 'tripping line' to be used to break out and lift an anchor on the water's surface so that a stuck anchor can more easily be freed.
Military
[edit]- Marker buoys, used in naval warfare (particularly anti-submarine warfare) emit light and/or smoke using pyrotechnic devices to create the flare and smoke. Commonly 3 inches (76 mm) in diameter and about 20 inches (500 mm) long, they are activated by contact with seawater and float on the surface. Some extinguish themselves after a specific period, while others are sunk when they are no longer needed.
- Sonobuoys are used by anti-submarine warfare aircraft to detect submarines by SONAR.
- Target buoys simulate targets, such as small boats, in live-fire exercises by naval and coastal forces. They are usually targeted by medium-sized weapons such as heavy machine guns, rapid fire cannons (~20 mm), autocannons (up to 40–57 mm) and anti-tank rockets.
Specific forms
[edit]- DAN buoys are used as:
- Large maritime navigational aids providing a platform for light and radio beacons
- Lifebuoys with flags, used on yachts and smaller pleasure craft
- Temporary markers in Danish seine fishing to mark net anchor positions
- Temporary markers set by danlayers during minesweeping operations to indicate the boundaries of swept paths, swept areas, known hazards, and other locations or reference points
- Temporary markers for rescue operations
- Spar buoys are tall, thin buoys that float upright, e.g. R/P FLIP
Other
[edit]- Letter boxes on buoys exist in Töre (Sweden) and at the Steinhuder Meer (Germany)[21]
Fictional
[edit]- Imaginary "Mail buoys" have been used as a prank in the US Navy when a new sailor may be given the task of locating one to retrieve non-existent mail.[22]
- Space buoys, a feature in some science fiction stories which are stationary objects in outer space that provide navigation data or warnings.[citation needed]
Other uses
[edit]- The word "buoyed" can also be used figuratively. For example, a person can buoy up ('lift up') someone's spirits by providing help and empathy.[23]
- Buoys are used in some wave power systems to generate electrical power.[24]
- George A. Stephen, founder of Weber-Stephen Products Co., invented the kettle grill by cutting a metal buoy in half and fashioning a dome shaped grill to it with a rounded lid.[25]
Gallery
[edit]-
Several different buoys at a storage depot.
-
A buoy used as turn marker for sailing races.
-
Old iron buoys, most likely for mooring.
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Children playing on a buoy in the Volga
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Recycled surface buoys
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A buoy beached at Sebastian Inlet State Park.
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Emergency buoy of the Swedish submarine Nordkaparen
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Gas buoy stranded on land after 1915 Galveston Hurricane, near Texas City, Texas
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Starboard lateral Buoy (Lateral mark - Region B - IALA ) as Channel Marker Buoy at "Río de la Plata" river, Buenos Aires, Argentina
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Tsunami buoy before deployment in Andaman Sea
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Lobster buoys hanging on a tree, Sprucehead Island, Maine, United States
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Buoys in dry storage, Homer, Alaska
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Drifting Buoy fitted with a Barometer
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Buoy undergoing repair
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Ring life buoy with a light on a cruise ship
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North cardinal buoy off the coast of Whitby, North Yorkshire
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The weather buoy moored at the coordinates of Null Island, located at 0°N 0°E
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Ice-resistant buoys MR-2S and N-2 at a playground in Tallinn, Estonia
See also
[edit]- Bowditch's American Practical Navigator – Encyclopedia of maritime navigation
- Buoy anti-tank obstacle – British anti-tank obstacle
- Buoyancy – Upward force that opposes the weight of an object immersed in fluid
- Day beacon – Unlighted nautical sea mark
- GPS buoy – Buoy equipped with a GPS receiver
- International Arctic Buoy Program – Programme to provide meteorological and oceanographic data
- Lateral mark – Sea mark marking the edge of a channel
- Lighthouse – Structure designed to emit light to aid navigation
- Lightship, also known as Lightvessel – Ship that functions as a lighthouse
- List of lights – Publication describing lighthouses and other aids to maritime navigation
- PowerBuoy – Marine power station
- United States Coast Pilot
References
[edit]- ^ "buoy". Dictionary.com Unabridged (Online). n.d.
- ^ "buoy". The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language (5th ed.). HarperCollins.
- ^ Naish, John (1985). Seamarks, their history and development. London: Stanford Maritime. p. 51. ISBN 0-540-07309-1.
- ^ a b Naish 1985, p. 51.
- ^ Naish 1985, p. 52.
- ^ Naish 1985, illustrations pp 53, 57.
- ^ Naish 1985, p. 59.
- ^ Naish 1985, pp. 59–60.
- ^ Naish 1985, pp. 65–66.
- ^ "Emergency Wreck Buoys | Navigation Buoys | Trinity House". Archived from the original on 2014-07-02. Retrieved 2014-05-26.
- ^ "Large Navigational Buoys (LNB)". United States Coast Guard. Retrieved Jul 6, 2015.
- ^ a b National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (2013). US Chart No. 1. Silver Spring: NOAA. p. 89.
- ^ Cobb, John N., "The Lobster Fishery of Maine", Bulletin of the United States Fish Commission, Vol. 19, Pages 241–265, 1899; from Project Gutenberg
- ^ Taft, Hank; Taft, Jan, A Cruising Guide to the Maine Coast and the Maine Coast Guides for Small Boats, Peaks Island, Maine : Diamond Pass Publishing, 5th Edition, 2009. Cf. Chapter: "BUOY, OH BUOY" Archived 2008-11-18 at the Wayback Machine, and Chapter: "Fisherman, Lobsterboats, and Working Harbors" Archived 2012-03-20 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Davies, D (1998). "Diver location devices". Journal of the South Pacific Underwater Medicine Society. 28 (3). Archived from the original on 2009-05-19. Retrieved 2013-04-16.
- ^ [METOCEAN. (2008). METOCEAN SLDMB: Operating & Maintenance Manual (Version 3.0 ed.) Retrieved from http://www.metocean.com.
- ^ [Bang, I., Mooers, C. N. K., Haus, B., Turner, C., Lewandowski, M. (2007). Technical Report: Surface Drifter Advection and Dispersion in the Florida Current Between Key West and Jacksonville, Florida. Technical Report.].
- ^ Kery, SM (1989). "Diving in support of buoy engineering: The RTEAM project". In: Lang, MA; Jaap, WC (Ed). Diving for Science...1989. Proceedings of the American Academy of Underwater Sciences Annual Scientific Diving Symposium 28 September – 1 October 1989 Wood Hole Oceanographic Institution, Woods Hole, Massachusetts, USA. Archived from the original on 2013-06-21. Retrieved 2013-04-16.
- ^ IALA (2008). "International Dictionary of Marine Aids to Navigation – ODAS buoy". Retrieved 10 December 2016.
- ^ RCC Pilotage Foundation: Baltic Sea and Approaches. Imray, Laurie, Norie and Wilson Ltd, 2019, p. 241, ISBN 9781846238925.
- ^ Die Postboje, www.steinhude-am-meer.de.
- ^ "Pranks: Some old, some new". USS RICH. USS RICH Association.
- ^ "buoy". Oxford English Dictionary. Vol. II (2nd ed.). Oxford University Press. 1989. p. 661. verb, sense 3.
- ^ "Buoy System Harnesses Wave Energy". ABC News. Retrieved 2023-09-25.
- ^ George Stephen, Company Founder and Inventor of the Weber Kettle Grill Archived June 23, 2007, at the Wayback Machine