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  2. Chesapeake Bay deadrise - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chesapeake_Bay_deadrise

    Watermen use these boats year round for everything from crabbing and oystering to catching fish or eels. Traditionally wooden hulled, the deadrise is characterised by a sharp bow that quickly becomes a flat V shape moving aft along the bottom of the hull.

  3. Caïque - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caïque

    A caïque (Greek: καΐκι, kaiki, from Turkish: kayık) is a traditional fishing boat usually found among the waters of the Ionian or Aegean Sea, and also a light skiff used on the Bosporus. It is traditionally a small wooden trading vessel, brightly painted and rigged for sail.

  4. Monterey clipper - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monterey_clipper

    The Monterey Clipper is a fishing boat common to the San Francisco Bay Area, the Monterey Bay Area and east to the Sacramento delta. [1] [2] Known variously as a Monterey Hull, Putt-putt, Silena boat, and Lampra boat, the Monterey Clipper's history has swung with the fortunes of the local fish industry and the paces of industrialization.

  5. Traditional fishing boat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Traditional_fishing_boat

    The oldest archaeological find of a wooden Nordic boat is the Hjortspring boat, built about 350 BC. This is the oldest known boat to use clinker planking, where the planks overlap one another. It was designed as a large canoe, 19 m long and crewed by 2223 men using paddles .

  6. Boat building - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boat_building

    Wood. Wood is the traditional boat building material used for hull and spar construction. It is buoyant, widely available and easily worked. It is a popular material for small boats (of e.g. 6-metre (20 ft) length; such as dinghies and sailboats).

  7. Cape Islander - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cape_Islander

    Cape Islanders in Yarmouth, Nova Scotia. A Cape Islander, a style of fishing boat mostly used for lobster fishing, is an inshore motor fishing boat found across Atlantic Canada having a single keeled flat bottom at the stern and more rounded towards the bow.