Yes, they were used.
Traditional Aborigines did not have guns, not did they see any use for them. Those that were integrated into European society did learn to use guns.
All guns use gunpowder (gun+powder= gunpowder). The 15th century saw early crude guns first being used, including use in war. However, the early guns were not accurate nor reliable, and the military still used bows, swords, lances and pikes MUCH more frequently than guns.
Yes. In fact, the Song Dynasty (which was Chinse) invented the compass and the astrolabe. The age of European exploration was AFTER Chinese dynasties.
As a result of European exploaration, the American continent was discovered.
the pioneers used guns, bows and arrows, and swords
According the archaeologists, the Hittites were the first to make widespread use of iron. This information was gathered through exploration in the regions of ancient Chaldea and Assyria, which contained relics from as early as 3000 BC. The primary use at that time consisted of weapons, such as daggers and spears.
Basic workings of guns have been the same since the early 1900s. The only thing that radically changed between the 1970s and now is wider use of plastics.
viking ship designs
Early Spitfires had 8 machine guns, later models had 4 x 20mm cannon.
There are no guns in the mii channel and cannot use guns to kill.
Amerigo Vespucci's voyages in the late 15th and early 16th centuries were significant because they contributed to the understanding that the lands discovered by European explorers were part of a new continent, separate from Asia. His exploration and mapping of the South American coastline helped to clarify the geography of the New World. Additionally, the use of his name to label the continent—America—underscored the impact of his work on European perceptions of the Western Hemisphere. This shift in understanding laid the groundwork for further exploration and colonization.
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