Gun deck

The term gun deck used to refer to a deck aboard a ship that was primarily used for the mounting of cannon to be fired in broadsides. The term is generally applied to decks enclosed under a roof; smaller and unrated vessels carried their guns on the upper deck, forecastle and quarterdeck, and these were not described as gun decks.[1]

Gun deck of HMS Victory
The lower gun deck of the Swedish 17th century warship Vasa looking toward the bow

On marine seismic survey vessels, the lowest deck on the ship is normally referred to as the gun deck. This deck carries the seismic source arrays, consisting of air guns arranged in clusters.[2][3]

Slang

The term "gun deck" is also navy slang for fabricating or falsifying something. A possible explanation relates to midshipmen retiring to the gun deck to complete their celestial navigation assignments of computing the ship's position three times daily following morning star sights, noon sun line, and evening star sights. While some midshipmen might be conscientious about computing positions from new observations, others were reputed to extrapolate and back calculate observation data from dead reckoning courses and speeds since earlier observations, and the computations performed on the gun deck were suspect.[4]

This term is now used to indicate the falsification of documentation in order to avoid doing the work or make present conditions seem otherwise acceptable.[4]

gollark: Okay, I guess it would be possible to do a different utterly insane thing actually!
gollark: ... links... need to go to one place?
gollark: Issue is, you can only have one actual live copy of a page at a time.
gollark: I see.
gollark: <@332271551481118732> So why do you think tree/graph revisions are valuable?

See also

References

  1. Knight, Austin M. Modern Seamanship Tenth Edition (1941) D. Van Nostrand Company p.798
  2. "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2014-05-13. Retrieved 2012-01-25.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  3. "Streamer Handling Apparatus For Use On Seismic Survey Vessels - Patent 6382124". Archived from the original on 2014-11-09. Retrieved 2012-01-25.
  4. "Origin of Navy Terminology". www.history.navy.mil. Retrieved 1 August 2018. In the modern Navy falsifying reports, records and the like is often referred to as 'gundecking.'


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