Category
page 1Ship graveyards

Nouadhibou
thumb|Street in Nouadhibou
Nouadhibou (; , ), formerly named Port-Étienne, is the second largest city in Mauritania and serves as a major commercial center. The city has about 173,000 inhabitants. It is situated on a 65-kilometre peninsula or headland called Ras Nouadhibou, ', or ', of which the western side has the city of La Güera. Nouadhibou is consequently located merely a couple of kilometers from the border between Mauritania and Western Sahara. Its current mayor is Elghassem Ould Bellali, who was installed on 15 October 2018.

Landévennec
Landévennec (; ) is a commune in the Finistère department of Brittany in north-western France.
Sable Island
island in Nova Scotia, Canada

Alang
thumb|Ongoing ship breaking at Alang
Alang is a census town in Bhavnagar district in the Indian state of Gujarat. Because it is home to the Alang Ship Breaking Yard, Alang beaches are considered the world's largest ship graveyard.thumb|SS SS France (1960)|Norway awaits the ship breakers at Alang, August, 2007
Ironbottom Sound
World War Two Ship Graveyard
Suisun Bay
bay on the California coast of the United States
ship graveyard
location where scrapped ships are left to decay and disintegrate
Goodwin Sands
sandbank off the east coast of England
Seven Stones Reef
Rocky reef offshore of Land's End, Cornwall

The Manacles
set of treacherous rocks off The Lizard peninsula in Cornwall, England, UK
Mallows Bay
bay in Charles County, Maryland, United States
Graveyard of the Atlantic
nickname
Torpedo Alley
one of the Atlantic graveyards during the Second World War