Table of Contents

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Volume 3 Number 1 (Jan-Feb-Mar, 2008)
Ocean Sovereignty – Fencing the Continental Shelf
Preface
Delineating Canada’s Continental Shelf According to the United Nations Convention on the Law of the SeaJacob Verhoef, Natural Resources Canada
Dick MacDougall, Canadian Hydrographic Service
Effective Management of High Seas Fisheries and International Collaborations in Oceans GovernanceFisheries and Oceans Canada
The New Zealand Continental Shelf Project - the Intersection of Technology and International LawVaughan Stagpoole et al., Institute of Geological and Nuclear Sciences
Laying Claim to Marine Spaces in the CaribbeanMichael Sutherland, University of the West Indies
Application of the General Bathymetric Chart of the Oceans (GEBCO) Digital Atlas in the Delineation of Continental Shelves under Article 76Dave Monahan, Centre for Coastal and Ocean Mapping
Collaborative Marine Scientific Research on the International SeabedMichael W. Lodge, International Seabed Authority
Marine Geospatial Software: Generating Economic Benefits from Hydrographic Data and Calculation of Maritime BoundariesSerge Lévesque, CARIS
José Alexis Primelles Cárdenas, CARIS
Mapping the Irish Seabed: The Irish National Seabed Survey and INFOMAR ProjectsKoenraad Verbruggen, Geological Survey of Ireland
Sean Cullen, Geological Survey of Ireland
- A History of Icebreaking Ships
Dr. Stephen J. Jones, Institute for Ocean Technology, National Research Council of Canada
- Inelastic Buckling of Geometrically Imperfect Tubes Under External Hydrostatic Pressure
Andrew P.F. Little, University of Portsmouth
Daniel Short, University of Portsmouth
Graham X. Brown, Sonardyne Ltd.
Carl T.F. Ross, University of Portsmouth
- Numerical and Experimental Analysis of Surfaced Submarine Roll Decay Behaviour
Greg Hermanski, Institute for Ocean Technology, National Research Council of Canada
Eric Thornhill, Defence Research and Development Canada
Ocean Sovereignty
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