The Broad Fourteens is an area of the southern North Sea that is fairly consistently fourteen fathoms (26 meters) deep (thus, on a nautical map showing depth, a broad area with many "14" notations). It is located off the coast of the Netherlands and south of the Dogger Bank, roughly between longitude 3°E and 4°30′E and latitude 52°30′N and 53°30′N. Compare to the Long Forties. The North Sea is a sea of the Atlantic Ocean, located between the coasts of Norway and Denmark in the east, the coast of the British Isles in the west, and the German, Dutch, Belgian and French coasts in the south. ... A fathom is a unit of measure equal to 2 yards or 6 feet, or 1. ... Dogger Bank is a large sandbank in a shallow area of the North Sea about 100km off the coast of the United Kingdom. ...
During World War I, U-9 singlehandedly sank the three cruisers of the "Live Bait Squadron" there. World War I was primarily a European conflict with many facets: immense human sacrifice, stalemate trench warfare, and the use of new, devastating weapons - tanks, aircraft, machineguns, and poison gas. ... Unterseeboot 9 has been the designation of two U-boats. ... USS Port Royal, a Ticonderoga-class guided missile cruiser, launched in 1994. ...
The BroadFourteens is an area of the southern North Sea that is fairly consistently fourteenfathoms (26 meters) deep (thus, on a nautical map showing depth, a broad area with many "14" notations).
For historical reasons the tracks built up to 1988 are broad gauge tracks, wider than the tracks of most other European countries.
While Russia chose broad gauge to make railborne invasion by its enemies that much more difficult, most non-standard broad gauges get in the way of interoperability of railway networks.