Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q827208> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 59 of
59
with 100 triples per page.
- Q827208 subject Q7334623.
- Q827208 subject Q8716899.
- Q827208 abstract "The North Atlantic weather war occurred during World War II. The allies (Britain in particular) and Germany vied for access to reliable weather data in the North Atlantic and Arctic Oceans and sought to deny the other weather information. Meteorological data was important as it affected military planning and the routing of ships and convoys. In some circumstances, visibility was necessary (photographic reconnaissance and bombing raids) and in others concealment (keeping ship movements secret or suppressing enemy air activity). D-day planning was greatly affected by weather forecasting; it was delayed by one day in the expectation that a storm would blow out and sea conditions would be acceptable. British sources of data included ships at sea and the weather stations at Valentia Observatory and Blacksod Point, in neutral Ireland. German use of weather ships also exposed their secret Enigma codes.".
- Q827208 thumbnail Weather_Station_Kurt.JPG?width=300.
- Q827208 wikiPageExternalLink Bad-weather-nearly-brought-down-D-Day.html.
- Q827208 wikiPageWikiLink Q105999.
- Q827208 wikiPageWikiLink Q1066823.
- Q827208 wikiPageWikiLink Q11220.
- Q827208 wikiPageWikiLink Q11224.
- Q827208 wikiPageWikiLink Q1221006.
- Q827208 wikiPageWikiLink Q123377.
- Q827208 wikiPageWikiLink Q1255490.
- Q827208 wikiPageWikiLink Q1324220.
- Q827208 wikiPageWikiLink Q14056.
- Q827208 wikiPageWikiLink Q145.
- Q827208 wikiPageWikiLink Q150758.
- Q827208 wikiPageWikiLink Q155.
- Q827208 wikiPageWikiLink Q155921.
- Q827208 wikiPageWikiLink Q157627.
- Q827208 wikiPageWikiLink Q161705.
- Q827208 wikiPageWikiLink Q16470.
- Q827208 wikiPageWikiLink Q1661027.
- Q827208 wikiPageWikiLink Q17083008.
- Q827208 wikiPageWikiLink Q172771.
- Q827208 wikiPageWikiLink Q182868.
- Q827208 wikiPageWikiLink Q185963.
- Q827208 wikiPageWikiLink Q189.
- Q827208 wikiPageWikiLink Q189796.
- Q827208 wikiPageWikiLink Q194364.
- Q827208 wikiPageWikiLink Q1945992.
- Q827208 wikiPageWikiLink Q1969469.
- Q827208 wikiPageWikiLink Q21162.
- Q827208 wikiPageWikiLink Q223.
- Q827208 wikiPageWikiLink Q25231.
- Q827208 wikiPageWikiLink Q329614.
- Q827208 wikiPageWikiLink Q329888.
- Q827208 wikiPageWikiLink Q3547425.
- Q827208 wikiPageWikiLink Q362.
- Q827208 wikiPageWikiLink Q380307.
- Q827208 wikiPageWikiLink Q4681865.
- Q827208 wikiPageWikiLink Q478751.
- Q827208 wikiPageWikiLink Q49.
- Q827208 wikiPageWikiLink Q502034.
- Q827208 wikiPageWikiLink Q683363.
- Q827208 wikiPageWikiLink Q7043580.
- Q827208 wikiPageWikiLink Q7043581.
- Q827208 wikiPageWikiLink Q7318.
- Q827208 wikiPageWikiLink Q7334623.
- Q827208 wikiPageWikiLink Q788.
- Q827208 wikiPageWikiLink Q8007.
- Q827208 wikiPageWikiLink Q826586.
- Q827208 wikiPageWikiLink Q834014.
- Q827208 wikiPageWikiLink Q845873.
- Q827208 wikiPageWikiLink Q852817.
- Q827208 wikiPageWikiLink Q8716899.
- Q827208 wikiPageWikiLink Q97.
- Q827208 comment "The North Atlantic weather war occurred during World War II. The allies (Britain in particular) and Germany vied for access to reliable weather data in the North Atlantic and Arctic Oceans and sought to deny the other weather information. Meteorological data was important as it affected military planning and the routing of ships and convoys.".
- Q827208 label "North Atlantic weather war".
- Q827208 depiction Weather_Station_Kurt.JPG.