Category
page 1Riverboats

inland waterway vessel
thumbnail|Various service riverboats, Belgrade
thumb|Passenger tourboat of Köln-Düsseldorfer on the river [[Rhine]]
thumb | A riverboat-"container ship" with the capacity for 500 [[intermodal containers of the TEU size.]]
right|thumb |A Mississippi River System-type riverboat, from an 1850s [[daguerrotype.]]
Rabelo boat
wooden Portuguese vessels that carried the wine casks from the quintas (wine estates) where it is produced to the mouth of Douro river
river cruise
voyage along inland waterways between river ports

Guffa
thumb|352px|upright|A kuphar in Baghdad in 1914
A kuphar (also transliterated kufa, kuffah, quffa, quffah, etc.) is a type of coracle or round boat traditionally used on the Tigris and Euphrates rivers in ancient and modern Mesopotamia. Its circular shape means that it does not sail well against the current, as it tends to spin, but makes it safe, sturdy and easy to construct. A kuphar is propelled by paddling, rowing or poling.
flatboat
thumb|A flatboat passing a long cigar-shaped keelboat on the [[Ohio River.]]
vytinė
Vytinė (from Lithuanian vytelė - withe, twig) was a type of Lithuanian trading vessel used from the 15th century up to the 20th century. It was a flat-bottomed, river-borne sailboat, 30-55 m long. Vytinė ships mainly transported timber, grains, and flax fiber down the Nemunas River, starting in Grodno in the east and ending in Königsberg in the west. It is thought that the vytinė boat was used for shipping goods to Danzig as well.
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.
Norfolk wherry
type of boat on The Broads in Norfolk, England