User Contributed Dictionary
Noun
seaports- Plural of seaport
Extensive Definition
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A port is a facility for receiving ships and transferring cargo. They
are usually situated at the edge of an ocean, sea, river, or lake. Ports often have
cargo-handling equipment such as cranes
(operated by longshoremen) and forklifts for use in
loading/unloading of ships, which may be provided by private
interests or public bodies. Often, canneries or other processing
facilities will be located near by. Harbour
pilots and tugboats
are often used to maneuver large ships in tight quarters as they
approach and leave the docks.
Ports which handle international traffic have customs facilities.
The terms "port" and "seaport" are used for ports
that handle ocean-going vessels, and "river port" is used for
facilities that handle river traffic, such as barges and other
shallow draft vessels. Some ports on a lake, river, or canal have
access to a sea or ocean, and are sometimes called "inland
ports". A "fishing port" is a type of port or harbor facility particularly
suitable for landing and distributing fish. A "dry port" is a
term sometimes used to describe a yard used to place containers or
conventional bulk cargo, usually connected to a seaport by rail or
road. A "warm water port" is a port where the water does not freeze
in winter. Because they are available year-round, warm water ports
can be of great geopolitical or economic interest, with the ports
of Saint
Petersburg and Valdez
being notable examples. A "port of call" is an intermediate stop,
for example to collect supplies or fuel.
Cargo
containers allow efficient transport and distribution by
eliminating loading of smaller packages at each transportation
point, and allowing the shipping unit to be sealed for its entire
journey. Standard containers can easily be loaded on a ship, train, truck, or airplane, greatly simplifying
intermodal transfers. Cargo often arrives by train and truck to be
consolidated at a port and loaded onto a large container
ship for international transport. At the destination port, it
is distributed by ground transport.
Ports and shipping containers are a vital part of
modern Just
In Time inventory management strategies.
Ports sometimes fall out of use. Rye, East
Sussex, England, UK was an important port
in the Middle Ages, but the coastline changed and it is now from
the sea. Also in the UK, London on the
River
Thames, and Manchester, on
the Manchester
Ship Canal, were once important international ports, but
changes in shipping methods, such as the use of containers and
larger ships, put them at a disadvantage.
See also
Water port topics- Harbour
- Marina - port for recreational boating
- Ship transport
- Transport
- Fishing
- Bandar (Persian word for "port" or "haven")
- Home Port Doctrine (United States)
- United States ports
Companies
Support to seafarers
- International Christian Maritime Association (Christian port chaplaincies)
- Apostleship of the Sea Catholic Church agency dedicated to the welfare of seafarers
- Sea rescue organisations
- International Committee on Seafarers' Welfare http://www.seafarerswelfare.org/
External links
- Port Industry Statistics, American Association of Port Authorities
- World Port Rankings 2005, by metric tons and by TEUs, American Association of Port Authorities (xls format, 26.5kb)
- World ports database at www.portvision.eu
- Information on 1,613 ports in 191 countries from Noonsite.com
- Seaport codes 2002 Seaport codes around the World - IATA 3 Letter Sea Port Codes
- Social & Economic Benefits of PORTS from "NOAA Socioeconomics" website initiative
seaports in Arabic: ميناء
seaports in Breton: Porzh (evit listri)
seaports in Bulgarian: Пристанище
seaports in Catalan: Port
seaports in Czech: Přístav
seaports in Danish: Havn
seaports in German: Hafen
seaports in Estonian: Sadam
seaports in Modern Greek (1453-): Λιμάνι
seaports in Spanish: Puerto marítimo
seaports in Esperanto: Haveno
seaports in Persian: بندر
seaports in French: Port (marine)
seaports in Korean: 항구
seaports in Croatian: Luka
seaports in Indonesian: Pelabuhan
seaports in Italian: Porto (struttura)
seaports in Hebrew: נמל
seaports in Latin: Portus
seaports in Lithuanian: uostas
seaports in Lingala: Libóngo
seaports in Dutch: Haven
seaports in Japanese: 港湾
seaports in Norwegian: Havn
seaports in Polish: Port morski
seaports in Portuguese: Porto
(transporte)|Porto
seaports in Romanian: Port
seaports in Russian: Порт
seaports in Simple English: Port
seaports in Slovenian: Pristanišče
seaports in Finnish: Satama
seaports in Swedish: Hamn
seaports in Tagalog: Pundahang pandagat
seaports in Turkish: Liman
seaports in Chinese: 港口
seaports in Walloon: Pôrt (ås
bateas)