6-595: N91 may refer to: HMS Trooper (N91) , a submarine of the Royal Navy London Buses route N91 Nebraska Highway 91 , in the United States Nokia N91 , a mobile phone [REDACTED] Topics referred to by the same term This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the same title formed as a letter–number combination. If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change
12-641: A sailing vessel and the Italian submarine Pietro Micca . She also damaged two other enemy vessels, and unsuccessfully attacked the Italian merchant Belluno (the former French Fort de France ). On her first operation, she took part in Operation Principal , which used human torpedoes to sink Italian ships in Palermo harbour. Trooper sailed from Beirut on 26 September 1943, on her 8th War Patrol to cover in
18-584: The Aegean Sea off the Dodecanese islands. On 14 October she challenged Levant Schooner Flotilla F8 off Alinda Bay, Leros. She failed to return on 17 October and was reported overdue on that day. She was presumed lost on German mines around Leros, but her wreck was later discovered in the Icarian Sea. The Germans claimed that Trooper was sunk by Q-ship GA.45 on 15 October 1943. The submarine that GA-45 attacked
24-408: The link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=N91&oldid=1115362956 " Category : Letter–number combination disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages HMS Trooper (N91) HMS Trooper (N91)
30-667: Was a T-class submarine of the Royal Navy . She was laid down by Scotts , Greenock , and launched in March 1942. On 3 October 2024 it was reported that HMS Trooper was discovered at a depth of 253 metres (830 ft) in the Icarian Sea in Greece . Trooper spent most of her short career serving in the Mediterranean . She sank the Italian tanker Rosario , the Italian merchant ship Forli ,
36-483: Was actually HMS Torbay which escaped undamaged. HMS Trooper was discovered at a depth of 253 metres (830 ft) in the Icarian Sea, north of the island of Donousa , in Greece . The submarine, found in three distinct sections (bow, mid-section, and stern), had likely been sunk by a German EMF mine containing 350 kilograms (770 lb) of Hexanite . This discovery, led by Greek researcher Kostas Thoctaridis, resolved an 81-year-old mystery, bringing closure to
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