I don't have any Seminole info avialable here, but a "shunt" has a specific meaning.
Railroad signal systems, for example, refer to a shunt as the electrical pathway created between the two rails when a train occupies a section of track that contains a detection circuit. Instead of current being allowed to run to the end of the track section and energize a relay, the current runs through the wheels and axle of the train, starving the relay at the other end of the track of its energy. This is why crossing gates go down as a train aproaches.
By definition, a shunt is an alternate, and intentional path for electricity or magnetism in a circuit. You could probably apply this term, by extension, to a flow of liquid, too, as in shunt the flow of oil. Sometimes, a high current shunt can be used in a charging system to indicate charging current flow. A voltage drop is measured across the shunt, and a proportional value of circuit current is calculated. This isn't used much because it is an inefficient method, and was favored before the days of the "amp clamp" for current diagnosis.
If you can describe where you see this mentioned in the case of the Seminole, I can probably be of more help.