Category
page 1Canoes

canoe
thumb|right|A B.N. Morris Canoe Company wood-and-canvas canoe built approximately 1912
dugout canoe
boat made from a hollowed tree trunk
Pesse canoe
boat constructed during the early mesolithic period
Hjortspring boat
large canoe type vessel dated to 350 found in Hjortspring Mose at Als, Denmark
Jelav
Jelav is a village in the municipality of Loznica, Serbia. According to the 2011 census, the village has a population of 854.

Dufuna canoe
second oldest ship in the world
Canadian canoe
byname for canoe
Mokoro
thumb|right|Two wooden mekoro
thumb|Travelling in a Mokoro (Okavangodelta 2017)
Chundan Vallam
type of boat in Kerala, India
balsa
South American boat made of reeds
Tilikum
dugout canoe
vinta
thumb|A Sama-Bajau fishing vinta in Zamboanga with the characteristic colorful sails (c.1923)
thumb|A small Sama-Bajau tondaan with sails deployed (c.1904)
thumb|Two large Moro people|Moro vinta from Mindanao in the houseboat (palau) configuration (c.1920)
The vinta is a traditional outrigger boat from the Philippine island of Mindanao. The boats are made by Sama-Bajau, Tausug and Yakan peoples living in the Sulu Archipelago, Zamboanga peninsula, and southern Mindanao. It is also made by the Sama-Bajau that lived in east coast of Sabah, Malaysia. Vinta are characterized by their colorful recta
Chasse-galerie
thumb|La Chasse-galerie by Henri Julien, 1906, [[Musée national des beaux-arts du Québec]]
Dalca
thumb|right|250px|Reconstruction of a dalca in the museum of Dalcahue.
The dalca or piragua is a type of canoe employed by the Chonos, a nomadic indigenous people of southern Chile, and Huilliche people living in Chiloé archipelago. It was a light boat and ideal for navigating local waterways, including between islands of the Chiloé Archipelago, through the Chacao Channel to mainland Chile, and along the coast of the Gulf of Penas. Spanish chronicles called it best-suited for those waters, far superior to ships of the conquistadores.
itaomacip
thumb|300x300px|Itaomacip drawn by Kodama Teiryo, bearing cargo of fur and dried salmon for trade. The ship drawn is not to scale: the actual hull is much larger than a human.
An itaomacip (Japanese: イタオマチㇷ゚, Ainu: ita-oma-cip, "boat with a board") is a boat built traditionally by the Ainu for seafaring purposes. The name itaomacip is derived from the Ainu words ita-oma-cip, meaning literally a "boat with a board" (ita is a loan word from Japanese meaning "board"). It is a sewn boat enlarged via attaching side plates to a dugout canoe. When navigating inland waters, like rivers or lakes, Ainu
mashoof
thumb|350px|Marsh Arab poling a mashoof
A mashoof (Arabic: مشحوف), also transliterated '''''', is a long and narrow canoe traditionally used on the Mesopotamian Marshes and rivers of southern Iraq. It was widely used by the Marsh Arabs, or Ahwaris (عرب الأهوار), as a fishing boat, water taxi, and primary means of transportation for people and goods. The mashoof's skinniness makes it an ideal vessel for navigating between the reeds and grasses of the marshes.
Einbäume von Stralsund
Bercy pirogues
neolithic pirogues discovered in Bercy, Paris, France, in 1991