List of shipwrecks in 1994

http://dbpedia.org/resource/List_of_shipwrecks_in_1994 an entity of type: SpatialThing

This list of shipwrecks in 1994 includes ships sunk, foundered, grounded, or otherwise lost during 1994.(This is a dynamic list and may never be able to satisfy particular standards for completeness. You can help by adding missing items with reliable sources.) rdf:langString
rdf:langString List of shipwrecks in 1994
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xsd:integer 3849006
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xsd:integer 13
rdf:langString Apache
rdf:langString Destiny
rdf:langString Eagle
rdf:langString Sonar
rdf:langString Starcraft
rdf:langString ,
rdf:langString Barbara
rdf:langString Jim
rdf:langString Conquest
rdf:langString Serenity
rdf:langString Perseverance
rdf:langString Wesley
rdf:langString Belair
rdf:langString Ural
rdf:langString Kari
rdf:langString Spirit
rdf:langString Explorer
rdf:langString Black and Blue
rdf:langString All Hands
rdf:langString Roughneck
rdf:langString Apollo Sea
rdf:langString BOS 400
rdf:langString Weisshorn
rdf:langString Ocean Spray
rdf:langString Chevak
rdf:langString Golden Eye
rdf:langString Algolake
rdf:langString Sea Mist
rdf:langString Knight Island
rdf:langString Mr. J
rdf:langString King & Winge
rdf:langString Rachel K
rdf:langString Saint Matthew
rdf:langString Teach
rdf:langString Advance II
rdf:langString Angela Marie
rdf:langString Anna Da
rdf:langString Blue Crown
rdf:langString Captain Etzel
rdf:langString Castle Cape
rdf:langString Dylan’s Dream
rdf:langString Fierce Competitor
rdf:langString Holgate I
rdf:langString JRM TČ-219 Streljko
rdf:langString Jody Ann
rdf:langString Judy M
rdf:langString Lady Bea
rdf:langString Lady Selket
rdf:langString Maia D
rdf:langString Mystic Lady
rdf:langString Pacific Mist
rdf:langString Pankof
rdf:langString Wagners Point
rdf:langString Westerly
xsd:gMonthDay --01-24
xsd:gMonthDay --02-05
xsd:gMonthDay --04-06
xsd:gMonthDay --04-16
xsd:gMonthDay --12-02
rdf:langString The salmon seiner sank near Sand Point, Alaska. Another fishing vessel rescued her crew of two.
rdf:langString Suffering from icing, the fishing vessel capsized and was lost without loss of life when a wave hit her broadside off Point Retreat in Southeast Alaska, west of Juneau, Alaska. Another fishing vessel rescued her crew of two.
rdf:langString The five-member crew of the salmon seiner abandoned her after she caught fire in Izhut Bay on the coast of Afognak Island in Alaska′s Kodiak Archipelago. The fishing vessel Cape Lookout rescued the crew from a skiff and took Dylan’s Dream under tow, but Dylan’s Dream burned to the waterline and became a total loss.
rdf:langString The retired barge was scuttled as an artificial reef in the North Atlantic Ocean off Sea Girt, New Jersey, at .
rdf:langString The cargo ship ran aground near at mouth of Guadalquivir River, Spain, following an anchor chain broke down in a storm and had broken in two. She was on voyage from Bangkok, Thailand to Seville, Spain. She was declared a constructive total loss and used as an artificial tourist wrecksite.
rdf:langString After her helmsman fell asleep at her wheel, the crab-fishing vessel was wrecked on rocks in a seal rookery on the south coast of St. George Island in the Bering Sea. Her crew of six abandoned ship in a life raft and reached the shore. A United States Coast Guard helicopter from the high endurance cutter hoisted them from the beach and placed them aboard the fish processor Blue Wave , which was moored nearby. The surf pounded Belair to pieces on the rocks, and she was deemed a total loss.
rdf:langString The 75-gross ton, fishing vessel burned and sank near the boat harbor at Sand Point, Alaska.
rdf:langString The fishing vessel was beached and destroyed by fire at False Pass, Alaska. Her crew of three survived
rdf:langString The overloaded ferry capsized in Kilindini Harbour, Kenya, just from port during a voyage between Mombasa and Likoni, killing 272 of the 400 people on board.
rdf:langString The longline halibut fishing vessel flooded, capsized, and sank in Frederick Sound in the Alexander Archipelago northwest of Petersburg, Alaska. Wesley′s captain put on her survival suit but drowned when she was trapped in the wheelhouse as Wesley capsized and sank. A nearby fishing vessel rescued the only other person on board.
rdf:langString The longline fishing vessel sank near Juneau, Alaska. The United States Coast Guard rescued her crew of two.
rdf:langString The 143-gross ton, crab fishing schooner sank in the Bering Sea approximately west of Saint Paul Island in the Pribilof Islands. The high endurance cutter rescued her crew of four.
rdf:langString The fish tender broke up and sank at Egegik, Alaska, after striking a rock. A fishing vessel rescued her entire crew of five.
rdf:langString The tanker collided with in the Bosphorus Strait. Both ships caught fire, Nassia was beached with the loss of a crew member.
rdf:langString The crab-fishing vessel ran aground near Reef Point at the entrance to the harbor at St. Paul on Saint Paul Island in the Pribilof Islands and broke up. A launch from the high endurance cutter rescued her crew of seven.
rdf:langString The bulk carrier sank in the Atlantic Ocean south west of Ireland with the loss of all 27 crew.
rdf:langString The cargo ship capsized and sank at Surabaya. The wreck was scrapped in June 1994.
rdf:langString The Chinese-owned, Panamanian-registered bulk carrier sank near Cape Town, South Africa, with the loss of all 36 of her crew.
rdf:langString thumb|The wreck of Murmansk on 6 January 2002. The decommissioned light cruiser ran aground and was wrecked off Sørvær, Finnmark, Norway, while under tow to be scrapped in India. Her wreck later was scrapped in situ.
rdf:langString Sri Lankan Civil War: The Patrol boats were sunk by the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam on the same day sometime in 1994.
rdf:langString The cargo ship sank in the Pacific Ocean south of Shikoku, Japan with the loss of seventeen of her 29 crew.
rdf:langString The cruise ship ran aground at Fuerteventura, Canary Islands, Spain, after her tow parted in a storm. She broke in two after two days and was declared a total loss in July 1994. The stern section sank in 1996, the bow section in April 2007.
rdf:langString The decommissioned lightship was scuttled as an artificial reef in of water in the North Atlantic Ocean east of Ocean City, New Jersey, at .
rdf:langString The retired tug was scuttled as an artificial reef in the North Atlantic Ocean off Harvey Cedars, New Jersey, in of water at .
rdf:langString The fishing vessel capsized and sank in Kennedy Entrance at the south end of Cook Inlet in Alaska. Another fishing vessel picked up two members of her crew and a United States Coast Guard rescue swimmer rescued a third crew member.
rdf:langString The tug was scuttled in deep water near Seward, Alaska, just south of Fourth of July Creek .
rdf:langString The fishing vessel was destroyed by fire near Ouzinkie, Alaska. Her crew of two survived.
rdf:langString The longline fishing vessel sank in bad weather in the Gulf of Alaska southeast of Kayak Island off the south-central coast of Alaska. A United States Coast Guard helicopter rescued her entire crew of six.
rdf:langString The ore-bulk-oil carrier broke in two during loading at Ponta da Madeira, Brazil. The wreck was later removed and scuttled offshore.
rdf:langString The 175-ton, crab-fishing vessel capsized in the Bering Sea approximately north-northwest of Dutch Harbor, Alaska. Her crew of five abandoned ship in a life raft and was rescued by the fishing vessel Silent Lady . The high endurance cutter sank Lady Selket′s overturned hull with M2 Browning machine gun fire, expending 600 rounds of .50-caliber ammunition.
rdf:langString The crab-fishing vessel sank in bad weather in Lisianski Inlet in Southeast Alaska north of Sitka, Alaska. A United States Coast Guard helicopter rescued her crew of five.
rdf:langString The crab-fishing vessel capsized in the Bering Sea approximately northwest of Saint Paul Island. One crewman died, but the fishing vessel Gulf Wind rescued the other seven. Saint Matthew was last seen drifting partially submerged west of Saint Paul Island.
rdf:langString The ship was driven ashore in a hurricane at Mormugao. Scrapped in situ in 1997.
rdf:langString The gillnet fishing vessel burned and sank at Port Moller , Alaska. Another fishing vessel rescued her crew of four.
rdf:langString The retired cargo ship was scuttled as an artificial reef in of water in the North Atlantic Ocean east of Ocean City, New Jersey, at .
rdf:langString The cargo ship was wrecked on the island of Senja, Norway. Wreck delivered for scrapping at Fosen Gjenvinning breaker's yard at Revsnes in Sør-Trøndelag in October 1995.
rdf:langString The crab-fishing vessel disappeared with the loss of her entire crew of five – four men and a woman – in the Gulf of Alaska. A life raft from Fierce Competitor was sighted southeast of Kodiak, Alaska, and about from where Fierce Competitor′s EPIRB had transmitted a distress signal, but there was no sign of life aboard the raft.
rdf:langString The ore carrier sank in the Atlantic Ocean. There were 36 crew on board.
rdf:langString The crab-fishing vessel sank in the Bering Sea northwest of Saint Paul Island. The fishing vessel Scandies Rose rescued her crew of five from a life raft.
rdf:langString The cargo ship sank during a storm in the North Atlantic Ocean with the loss of 29 of her 31 crew.
rdf:langString The retired fishing trawler and clam dredger was scuttled as an artificial reef in the North Atlantic Ocean off Spray Beach, New Jersey, in of water at .
rdf:langString The salmon gillnetter sank in bad weather in Nichols Passage in Southeast Alaska. Another fishing vessel rescued her crew of two.
rdf:langString The 1 salmon seiner sank after colliding in fog with the fishing vessel Capelin off Elrington Island on the south-central coast of Alaska. The United States Coast Guard rescued her crew of four.
rdf:langString thumb|right|The wreck of SAS Pietermaritzburg in June 2011.The officers′ training ship was scuttled to create an artificial reef at Miller's Point near Simon’s Town, South Africa.
rdf:langString The fishing trawler sank in the Bering Sea off Unimak Island in the Aleutian Islands. A United States Coast Guard helicopter rescued her crew of four from a life raft.
rdf:langString The salmon seiner was destroyed by fire at Naknek, Alaska. One crew member perished.
rdf:langString The crab-fishing vessel capsized and sank in of water in southern Glacier Bay just south of Strawberry Island in Southeast Alaska after her crab pots shifted, causing her to flood by the stern. Another fishing vessel rescued all three people on board.
rdf:langString The retired barge was scuttled as an artificial reef in the North Atlantic Ocean off Spray Beach, New Jersey, at .
rdf:langString The fishing trawler sank in of water without loss of life south of Sheep Point, Newport, Rhode Island, at after striking a floating object that pierced her hull.
rdf:langString The fishing trawler sank in the Gulf of Alaska approximately southeast of Cape Chiniak on Alaska′s Kodiak Island. Her entire crew of four survived; a United States Coast Guard helicopter rescued three of them, and the fishing vessel Cap’N Art picked up the fourth.
rdf:langString The prawn trawler, a former tug, capsized and sank at Eden, New South Wales. All crew were rescued by Rubicon .
rdf:langString The decommissioned was scuttled in the Indian Ocean in the Rottnest ship graveyard 12 nautical miles west of Rottnest Island, Western Australia, after use as a target.
rdf:langString The cutter was severely damaged in a collision with a container ship off Fehmarn.
rdf:langString Sri Lankan Civil War: The was sunk off Mannar, Sri Lanka, by two Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam suicide boats. 25 crewmen killed, 18 prisoners of war.
rdf:langString The decommissioned was sunk as a target by Royal New Zealand Air Force A-4 Skyhawks west of Rottnest Island, Western Australia.
rdf:langString The longline halibut-fishing vessel sank near Perl Island off the south-central coast of Alaska during a storm. The cutter rescued all five members of her crew.
rdf:langString The crab-fishing vessel sank in the Gulf of Alaska south of the Trinity Islands . A United States Coast Guard helicopter rescued her two crew members from a life raft.
rdf:langString The longline fishing vessel was wrecked at Trinity Point on the south-central coast of Alaska northeast of Whittier. Her crew of three survived.
rdf:langString thumb|John H Amos The paddle tug sank at Chatham, Kent
rdf:langString While under tow by the fishing vessel Royal Baron , the halibut longliner capsized and sank in lower Shelikof Strait off the south-central coast of Alaska. Her entire crew of five survived.
rdf:langString The motor vessel sank at San Diego, California, due to neglect. She broke in half in 1995, and was refloated, towed out to sea, and scuttled in the Pacific Ocean in late 1997 or January 1998.
rdf:langString The ore carrier sank in the Atlantic Ocean west of Cape Town, South Africa with the loss of all 24 crew.
rdf:langString The salmon troller sank in Stevenson Entrance on the south-central coast of Alaska. Her crew of two survived and was rescued by the United States Coast Guard.
rdf:langString The salmon troller was destroyed by fire at False Pass, Alaska. Her two-man crew escaped in a skiff.
rdf:langString While no one was on board, the fishing vessel burned to the waterline in Kitoi Bay on the coast of Kodiak Island near Kodiak, Alaska, after a fire began in her stove.
rdf:langString Carrying approximately 70 people attempting to leave Cuba illegally, the tugboat sank northeast of Havana, Cuba, after reportedly being rammed repeatedly by patrol boats of the Cuban Coast Guard. Only 31 people aboard her survived.
rdf:langString Algolake ran aground in the St. Lawrence River off Quebec.
rdf:langString The retired pleasure craft was scuttled as an artificial reef in the North Atlantic Ocean south of Long Island off Shinnecock Inlet, New York.
rdf:langString thumb|Pallas Athena The cruise ship caught fire and sank at the Port of Piraeus. The wreck was scrapped in 1995.
rdf:langString The ferry sank in Manila Bay with the loss of 140 lives after colliding with the cargo ship Kota Suria .
rdf:langString The ferry sank in the Baltic Sea due to the loss of her bow doors in a storm. There were 989 people on the ferry of which 864 were lost.
rdf:langString The catamaran ferry ran aground in the Derwent River at Hobart, Tasmania during trials. Damage was put at A$4,000,000 .
rdf:langString The salmon tender capsized and sank in 90 to 120 feet of water in the Shelikof Strait approximately off Cape Ugat on the coast of Kodiak Island in Alaska′s Kodiak Archipelago. The buoy tender rescued her crew of three.
rdf:langString The salmon seiner ran aground and sank at Entrance Island near Sea Otter Harbor in Southeast Alaska. Another fishing vessel rescued her entire crew of five.
rdf:langString The halibut longliner sank in the Shelikof Strait approximately south of Karluk, Alaska, after her engine room flooded through a broken fish bin. The fishing vessel Victoria Ann rescued her crew of three.
rdf:langString The fishing vessel was wrecked at Granite Cove on George Island in Cross Sound in the Alexander Archipelago in Southeast Alaska. Her crew of two survived.
rdf:langString The crab-fishing schooner struck an iceberg and sank off Bay Point in Farragut Bay in Southeast Alaska north of Petersburg, Alaska. All four people on board survived.
rdf:langString The was sunk as a target during a torpedo exercise.
rdf:langString Croatian War of Independence: The torpedo boat, captured by the Croatian Navy in 1991, was sunk as a target by the missile boat RTOP-11 Kralj Petar Krešimir IV with RBS-15B missiles.
rdf:langString The research vessel – a former PCE-842-class patrol craft – was scuttled off Kitty Hawk, North Carolina, to create an artificial reef.
rdf:langString The crab processor – a former PCE-842-class patrol craft and auxiliary minelayer – was towed out into the Pacific Ocean and scuttled sometime in the 1990s.
xsd:date 1964-02-15
xsd:date 1994-01-02
xsd:date 1994-01-13
xsd:date 1994-01-15
xsd:date 1994-01-25
xsd:date 1994-01-28
xsd:date 1994-02-01
xsd:date 1994-02-03
xsd:date 1994-02-06
xsd:date 1994-02-09
xsd:date 1994-02-13
xsd:date 1994-02-22
xsd:date 1994-02-23
xsd:date 1994-02-24
xsd:date 1994-02-25
xsd:date 1994-03-04
xsd:date 1994-03-05
xsd:date 1994-03-13
xsd:date 1994-03-23
xsd:date 1994-04-23
xsd:date 1994-04-29
xsd:date 1994-05-11
xsd:date 1994-05-16
xsd:date 1994-06-05
xsd:date 1994-06-08
xsd:date 1994-06-10
xsd:date 1994-06-11
xsd:date 1994-06-21
xsd:date 1994-06-22
xsd:date 1994-06-26
xsd:date 1994-07-06
xsd:date 1994-07-13
xsd:date 1994-07-24
xsd:date 1994-08-01
xsd:date 1994-08-02
xsd:date 1994-08-03
xsd:date 1994-08-04
xsd:date 1994-08-08
xsd:date 1994-08-11
xsd:date 1994-08-21
xsd:date 1994-09-03
xsd:date 1994-09-09
xsd:date 1994-09-14
xsd:date 1994-09-16
xsd:date 1994-09-18
xsd:date 1994-09-19
xsd:date 1994-09-20
xsd:date 1994-09-23
xsd:date 1994-09-28
xsd:date 1994-09-29
xsd:date 1994-09-30
xsd:date 1994-10-08
xsd:date 1994-10-25
xsd:date 1994-10-26
xsd:date 1994-11-11
xsd:date 1994-11-12
xsd:date 1994-11-18
xsd:date 1994-11-30
xsd:date 1994-12-02
xsd:date 1994-12-09
xsd:date 1994-12-21
xsd:date 1994-12-24
rdf:langString Unknown date 1993
rdf:langString Unknown date August 1994
xsd:integer 22
rdf:langString Unknown
xsd:string 39.2574 -74.2334
rdf:langString This list of shipwrecks in 1994 includes ships sunk, foundered, grounded, or otherwise lost during 1994.(This is a dynamic list and may never be able to satisfy particular standards for completeness. You can help by adding missing items with reliable sources.)
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 49132
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