northeast and southeast
No. The routes our ships take or took have no effect on hurricanes. Slave ships, however, generally came from Sub-Saharan Africa, and so had to travel through the tropical waters of the Atlantic west to the Americas using the trade winds. Tropical ocean water is one of the main ingredients needed for the formation of hurricanes. The storms are also generally steered westward by the trade winds. So the storms travel the same general direction as the slave ships, but do not actually follow the trade routes.
what sits on the water and warns ships of the danger coast
International Convention for the Prevention of Pollution from Ships (MARPOL)
seaway
A sheltered body of water where ships harbor is called a harbor or a port.
go to a different web site. go to a different web site.
triangular trade route
the third part, in which ships sailed from the Americas back to Europe
Triangular trade worked like this. Ships loaded with merchant goods, like guns, rum, clothing etc. sailed to Africa from Europe. There the merchant goods were traded for slaves. The ship loaded with slaves in middle passage sailed for the Americas and traded the slaves for raw materials like cotton, tobacco, pineapples and coffee. The ships then sailed for Europe and the process was begun again.
there was three ships , the Mayflower , pinta and santa maria
Traders on trading ships sailed around Europe, spreading the plague as they went.
Trade winds
G
The coonists traded their goods with the countries, England and Europe. They had triangular trade.
Christopher Columbus used several ships. On his first voyage he sailed on the Santa Maria until it hit a reef and sank, he then sailed the Pinta back to Europe. He used other ships in his pater voyages.
The "Atlantic Trade" winds
The New England ships sailed to England and Europe to carry on their trading. This was considered as a triangular trading agreement.