In the 15th and 16th centuries.
yes
It helped then know where to go & differnt Routes.to take
The wind blowing the sails is what made the caravels (ships) sail. It balances with the pressure of the wind blowing onto the sail to push the ship across the ocean. Kinda like when you drag your dog if he/she doesn't want to walk. You dragging the dog is like you're the wind, the dog's the ship, and the leash to drag the dog with is the sail. You get it? :D?
Hernando De Soto sailed on large sailing ships from France. He travelled in one across the Atlantic Ocean to America.
The caravel was made smaller and with a shallow keel to take advantage of the wind. Like other ships of the time, it was made of wood.
Caravels were fast, easy to handle on the high seas. maneuverable in battle, and seaworthy.
Wharf of the Caravels was created on 1994-03-15.
Caravels used triangular sails that, unlike traditional square sails, allowed ships to sail against the windnavigation tools made routes more accuratemaps made it more visible to see and travel
yes
Caravels
Caravels were first created in the 15th century by Portuguese explorers. The particular type of sails developed were especially good at sailing into the wind (known as beating) and caravels were extensively employed to sail and explore the African coasts
No, caravels is a noun, a common, plural noun. The singular form is caravel. The appropriate pronoun to use for a caravel (a type of ship) is it.
caravels
yes
Yes.
On board of ships known as Caravels.
did caravels had tillers or stering whells?