transportation: Transportation across Water
Transportation across Water
Little is known of the origins of water transportation. As long ago as 3000
In the late Middle Ages, leadership in transportation by sea passed to Spain and Portugal. Maritime transportation between Europe and North America in the Age of Discovery began the English dominance of the seas that lasted until World War I. The forests of New England encouraged the building of wooden sailing vessels, and American schooners and clippers came to carry a large share of the world's shipping, until they were supplanted by steel-hulled steamships in the late 19th cent. Diesel power soon replaced steam, and in the mid-20th cent. the first nuclear powered vessels were launched. Inland water transportation grew with the extensive canal construction of the 16th and 17th cent.
Sections in this article:
- Introduction
- Transportation through the Air
- Transportation across Water
- Transportation over Land
- Bibliography
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