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Dunkerque - Basin Maritime

 
 
Information about the waterway

The Dunkerque - Basin Maritime is a commercial waterway and is part of the Waterways of Mainland Europe. It runs for 8.99 kilometres from Dunkerque - Bassin de Mardyck (where it joins the Liaison Dunkerque-Escaut and the Canal des Dunes) to Bassin de Darse No 1 (where it joins the Dunkerque (Bassin de Commerce) Route).

The exact dimensions of the largest boat that can travel on the waterway are not known. The maximum headroom is not known. The maximum draught is not known.

It has a junction with the Port du Grand Large Route at Port du Grand Large Jonction.

Dunkerque - Bassin de Mardyck
Start of Liaison Dunkerque-Escaut
Port du Grand Large Jonction 8.02 kilometres 0 locks
Pont du Môle No 2 8.27 kilometres 0 locks
Bassin de Darse No 1 8.99 kilometres 0 locks
 
 
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External websites
 VisuRiS — associated with Waterways of Mainland Europe
The official inland waterway resource for Belgium with actual traffic and planned operations on the waterways. Also has voyage planning and notices to mariners
 
Wikipedia

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Wikipedia pages that might relate to Dunkerque - Basin Maritime
[Dunkirk] Dunkirk (UK: /dʌnˈkɜːrk/, US: /ˈdʌnkɜːrk/; French: Dunkerque [dœ̃kɛʁk] (listen); French Flemish: Duunkerke; Dutch: Duinkerke(n) [ˈdœynkɛrkə(n)] (listen)) [Seine–Nord Europe Canal] Canal Dunkerque-Escaut, east of Arleux. It is the French part of a proposed Seine-Scheldt canal that would ultimately connect the Rhine and Seine basins inland [Ateliers et Chantiers de France] the 1970s and 1980s. In 1972 the shipyard became Chantiers de France-Dunkerque, and in 1983 merged with others yards to become part of Chantiers du Nord [Florent Guillain] (1871). Port de Dunkerque... Construction de l'écluse à sas d'entrée du nouveau bassin... Plan général de la ville et du port de Dunkerque, dressé par l'ingénieur [North Sea] Times and Tide Chart for London". tide-forecast.com. Tide tables for Dunkerque: Tides Chart and tide forecast Tide tables for Zeebrugge: Tides Chart [List of college towns] Créteil (Paris-Est Créteil University) Dijon (University of Burgundy) Dunkerque (University of the Littoral Opal Coast) Évry, Essonne (University of Évry [Fleet review] representative for the coronation, across the Atlantic; the new French battleship Dunkerque; and the elderly Soviet Marat. Also present were the formidable looking [List of Type T2 tankers] French Government, Dunkerque in 1948, renamed Ardeshir. Renamed Langeais in 1954. To Société Maritime des Petroles BP, Dunkerque in 1955. To Crestview [North Carolina-class battleship] "M," would use quadruple turrets to save weight (similar to the French Dunkerque) while still mounting 12 guns. Many officers in the United States Navy [List of shipwrecks in October 1871] Catherine Christiana  Norway The brigantine was driven ashore and wrecked at Dunkerque, Nord. Her crew were rescued. Haabet  Norway The ship was driven ashore
 
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