United States

ATCHAFALAYA

/ Dredging, IMO 7914248

ATCHAFALAYA is currently in Quincy, last seen more than 12h ago

The vessel was built in 1980, and is sailing under the flag of United States. Her length overall (LOA) is 60 meters, and her width (beam) is 12 meters. Her summer deadweight capacity is 1,000 tonnes.

Track the live position of ATCHAFALAYA with AIS data from satellites, terrestrial and dynamic AIS sources. Get global coverage and live positions for all ships by registering a free account in ShipAtlas by Maritime Optima.

Register a free account

Current voyage information

Register for free to view current speed, draft, course and navigational status.

Last port calls

Port name Arrival time Departure time
Quincy Quincy (us) Sunday 28th January
Portsmouth Portsmouth (us) Tuesday 23rd January Sunday 28th January
Jacksonville Jacksonville (us) Sunday 26th November Sunday 26th November
Register to see more

Frequently asked questions

Where is ATCHAFALAYA right now?

The current position of ATCHAFALAYA in the Quincy, last seen more than 12h ago.

What type of ship is ATCHAFALAYA?

ATCHAFALAYA is a classified as a Dredging.

How big is ATCHAFALAYA?

ATCHAFALAYA is 60 meters long (LOA) and 12 meters wide (beam).

ATCHAFALAYA
United States

ATCHAFALAYA

/ Dredging, IMO 7914248

ATCHAFALAYA is currently in Quincy, last seen more than 12h ago

View live position

The vessel was built in 1980, and is sailing under the flag of United States. Her length overall (LOA) is 60 meters, and her width (beam) is 12 meters. Her summer deadweight capacity is 1,000 tonnes.

Track the live position of ATCHAFALAYA with AIS data from satellites, terrestrial and dynamic AIS sources. Get global coverage and live positions for all ships by registering a free account in ShipAtlas by Maritime Optima.

Register a free account

Vessel details

Name ATCHAFALAYA
Vessel type / Dredging
IMO 7914248
MMSI 367453000
Callsign WDF6708
Flag United States
Year built 1980
Length overall (LOA) 60 meters
Width (beam) 12 meters
Deadweight (DWT) 1,000 tonnes

Read from our blog