The harpoon is a metal lance that is blasted out of the ship's harpoon gun by old-fashioned black powder. |
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The harpoon guns were mounted on fast steam-driven vessels, making it possible to catch the faster-swimming rorquals. |
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They sat through lectures, touched whalebone, poured over maps and even tried their hand at balancing a harpoon. |
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When a whale was sighted in the bay, boats from the rival stations would race to be the first to harpoon the animal. |
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Government-owned radio RTHK said Lever tried to harpoon the croc but missed because it was too far away. |
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The harpoonist leaps from the bows on to the whale, plants his harpoon and slides into the water before scrambling back on board. |
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The whale-line is the length of rope attached to the harpoon, which connects the boat to the whale it is following. |
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Modern whaling began in 1868, when the harpoon gun and explosive harpoon were invented. |
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With a grenade-tipped harpoon, the whale takes about thirty minutes to die. |
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He could throw a 40-pound harpoon with line attached as easily as an athlete could handle a javelin. |
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The main wheels can be toed out allowing the aircraft to turn into the wind while the decklock harpoon remains engaged. |
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A teenage boy was fighting for his life in hospital yesterday, after a three-pronged harpoon was shot into his eye during a late night row. |
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For this reason, the arapaima tends to float near the surface of the water and is vulnerable to harpoon and spear fishing. |
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A new harpoon gun and faster, steam-powered chaser boats made it easy to capture even the swiftest whales. |
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He could sink that harpoon 3 feet into a whale and once fast it was not long before he was on the whale's back driving the lance 6 feet into its vitals. |
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In total, there are eight heavy guns like the bazooka and assault rifle, two pistols and five miscellaneous weapons such as the harpoon and crossbow. |
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Two students composed a synthesized soundtrack that combined world beat rhythms with the beat of the sacred sistrum on every thrust of the harpoon. |
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The line attached to the harpoon, which keeps the whale boat in contact with the whale, it snaps tight when the harpoon has been thrown successfully. |
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Japan claims it needs to harpoon the whales and dissect them to determine migration patterns as well as gain data on their feeding and breeding habits. |
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Branson expertly reels in one close to 100 lb. Charlie had gaffed the smaller fish but JJ has to harpoon this one before he can safely bring it onto the boat. |
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According to local legend, the killer whales would even guide the tiny whale boats out to the hunt so that the whalers could harpoon and lance the harassed animal. |
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Bond engages Largo in a fistfight before Largo is shot dead with a harpoon gun wielded by Domino. |
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Dead animals were returned to the hunter that made the first strike, by identifying his markings on the harpoon head embedded in the animal. |
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On the right side of the entrance to my mother's womb lay a harpoon and a hunting knife. |
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No, bigness is something that's hard to harpoon, like how many oceans fit into the moon. |
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From each of these stations, a fleet of chaser boats would venture out to harpoon whales and tow them back for processing. |
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In some cases, dolphin and porpoise bycatch has turned to directed net or harpoon hunts by artisanal fishers. |
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In spring, seals basking on surface ice were stalked and harpooned with a toggling harpoon. |
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In deeper water hunting situations, belugas are sometimes wounded to slow them down before a harpoon line is attached. |
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When it went down a bit, that's when the seal was coming up and it was time to harpoon it. |
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It is common practice to harpoon a whale before killing it, so that retrieval is easier. |
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They would harpoon them with a 1,000-foot cable attached to a 45-gallon barrel of water, they'd harpoon them and let that go. |
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Because you knew a seal was coming, you were confident about your ability to catch it and you would start to harpoon it before it even came up. |
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Its normal location and stowage are such that the boat would have to have been capsized for the harpoon to fall out. |
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It also gave them materials for making clothing, tents, kayaks, bowstrings, harpoon lines and tools. |
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One piece of equipment in particular was the halibut harpoon and its plastic float. |
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That resembles a rifle launches harpoon, for the boats, the barrel is short and the completion nickelled. |
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Elaborate bone tools were used: toggling and fixed harpoons, harpoon foreshafts, projectile points, eyed needles, and many others. |
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Hook and line, pole and line, harpoon, and trap fishing have very little by-catch. |
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In the process, the shark also takes the old man's harpoon and rope. |
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In his one-man play, he sits next to a real campfire and uses props from his home, such as his crocodile harpoon and clap sticks, to illustrate his life. |
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The torero uses these long pikes that end in a 5 cm long harpoon to ensure the blood flows outwards and avoid internal bleeding, keeping the bull upright. |
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The harpoon fishing and the dive in diving suit are also prohibited. |
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If they see a spout of mist from the blowhole of a grey whale, the tribal members will paddle stealthily up to the whale and throw a sharp harpoon into the mammal's flanks. |
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Grab your harpoon and dive into a deep sea blockbusting adventure! |
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Greenpeace activist Mikey Resto braved force-11 winds to grab the harpoon and unfurl a protest banner on top of the dying minke whale. |
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Others plunge banderillas, which are sticks with harpoon points, into the bull's back. |
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Next banderilleros run around the bull and plunge harpoon sticks into him, further tearing the flesh. |
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At a second site, remnants of netting, a harpoon shaft, basketry and braided work were uncovered in an underground spring. |
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The last significant innovation in whalecraft combined characteristics of the harpoon and the whaling gun. |
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Options include the old hand harpoon as it was used traditionally, or a modified version with a grenade on the tip like the ones used in the Alaskan bowhead hunt. |
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The harpoon is made from wood and ivory, the avataq from hide and sinew. |
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In the Arctic, the indigenous people used the more advanced toggling harpoon design. |
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The two flue harpoon was the primary weapon used in whaling around the world, but it cut through the blubber when under stress. |
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The three remaining targets are another roundworm, a hydra from the group of harpoon flingers that includes corals, and a slime mold. |
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There is no direct evidence of voyaging out in dugouts to harpoon whales that could kill the voyagers in an instant. |
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Whenever we harpooned it, the harpoon head was made to itumi, come apart. |
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But just across the pier are four large ships, with mysterious gantries and winches above their decks: whalers, their harpoon guns in storage as the government ponders allowing a commercial hunt. |
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In the second half of the 19th century, the explosive harpoon was invented, leading to a massive increase in the catch size. |
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Taiji has been organising whale hunts ever since locals made breakthroughs 400 years ago in harpoon technology and in the use of nets to slow down whales migrating along this rocky coast. |
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Because rorquals sank when they died, later versions of the exploding harpoon injected air into the carcass to keep it afloat. |
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This harpoon design also utilized a shaft that was connected to the head with a moveable joint. |
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In 1870, a Norwegian man named Svend Foyn successfully patented and pioneered the modern exploding whaling harpoon and gun. |
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The shell was designed to explode on contact and impale the whale with the harpoon. |
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The basking shark has been the target of harpoon fishing from small boats, but it has also been taken in nets, including bottom gill nets and occasionally bottom and pelagic trawls. |
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With quick presence of mind, Ootah grasped the rear upstander of the sled, which had begun to slide to and fro, and planted his harpoon in the ice. |
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Various stone and ivory tools were found, including a toggling harpoon. |
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In some parts of the world, such as Taiji, Japan and the Faroe Islands, dolphins are traditionally considered as food, and are killed in harpoon or drive hunts. |
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It has sharp spikes to prevent the harpoon from sliding out. |
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In some parts of the world, such as Taiji, Japan and the Faroe Islands, dolphins are traditionally considered food, and are killed in harpoon or drive hunts. |
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In the early 19th century the one flue harpoon was introduced, which reduced failed harpoons due to the head cutting its way out of the body of the whale. |
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In some parts of the world, such as Taiji in Japan and the Faroe Islands, dolphins are traditionally considered food and are killed in harpoon or drive hunts. |
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