Watercraft, also known as water vessels or waterborne vessels, are
vehicles used in water, including
boats,
ships,
hovercraft and
submarines. Watercraft usually have a propulsive capability (whether by
sail,
oar,
paddle or
engine) and hence are distinct from a simple device that merely
floats, such as a
log raft.
Types
Most watercraft would be described as either a
ship or a
boat. However, there are numerous
craft which many people would consider neither a ship nor a boat, such as:
surfboards (when used as a paddle board),
underwater robots,
seaplanes, and
torpedoes.
Although ships are typically larger than boats, the distinction between those two categories is not one of size per se.
*
Ships are typically large ocean-going vessels; whereas
boats are smaller, and typically travel most often on inland or coastal waters.
*A
rule of thumb says "a boat can fit on a ship, but a ship can't fit on a boat", and a ship ''usually'' has sufficient size to carry its own boats, such as
lifeboats,
dinghies, or
runabouts.
*Local
law and regulation ''may'' define the exact size (or the number of
masts) that distinguishes a ship from a boat.
*Traditionally,
submarines were called "boats", perhaps reflecting their cramped conditions: small size reduces the need for power, and thus the need to surface or
snorkel for a supply of the air that running
marine diesel engines requires; whereas, in contrast,
nuclear-powered submarines'
reactors supply power without consuming air, and such craft are large, much roomier, and classed as ships in some
navies.
*A
merchant ship is any floating craft that transports cargo for the purpose of earning revenue. In this context, a passenger ship's "cargo" is its passengers.
The term "watercraft" (unlike such terms as
aircraft or
spacecraft) is rarely used to describe any individual object: rather the term serves to unify the category that ranges from
jet skis to
aircraft carriers. Such a vessel may be used in saltwater and freshwater; for pleasure, recreation, physical exercise,
commerce,
transport or
military missions.
Usage

Usually the purposes behind watercraft designs and skills are for seafaring education or leisure activities,
fishing and resource extraction, transportation of cargo or passengers, and for conducting
combat or
salvage operations. In general, the purpose of a water vehicle identifies its utility with a
maritime industry sub-sector.
Design
The design from which a water vehicle is created usually seeks to achieve a balance between internal capacity (
tonnage), speed and
seaworthiness. Tonnage is predominantly a consideration in transport operations, speed is important for
warships, and safety is a primary consideration for less experienced or often smaller and less stable training and leisure vehicles. This is due to the great level of regulatory compliance required by the larger watercraft, which ensures very infrequent instances of
foundering at sea through application of extensive
computer modeling and
ship model basin testing before
shipyard construction begins.
Propulsion
Historically, water vehicles have been propelled by
people with
poles,
paddles, or
oars, through manipulation of sails that propel by
wind pressure and/or lift, and a variety of engineered machinery that create subsurface
thrust through the process of
internal combustion or electricity. The technological history of watercraft in European history can be divided by reference to
marine propulsion as simple paddle craft, oared
galleys from the 8th century BCE until the 15th century,
lateen sail during the
Age of Discovery from the early 15th century and into the early 17th century,
full-rigged ships of the
Age of Sail from the 16th to the mid 19th century, the Age of Steam reciprocating
marine steam engine roughly between 1770 and 1914, the
steam turbine, later gas turbine, and
internal combustion engines using
diesel fuel,
petrol and
LNG as fuels from the turn of the 20th century, which have been supplemented to a degree by
nuclear marine propulsion since the 1950s in some naval watercraft. Current technological development seeks to identify cheaper, renewable and less polluting sources of propulsion for watercraft of all shapes and sizes.
Construction

Secondary applications of technology in watercraft have been those of used structural materials,
navigation aids; and in the case of
warships,
weapon systems. The purpose of usage and the physical environment define the materials used in construction which had historically included grasses, leather, timbers, metals combined with timber or without,
silicate and plastic derivatives, and others.
Registration

Watercraft registration is the registration of a watercraft with a government authority. In the United States, it consists of an
alphanumeric string called a vessel registration number that is issued by the state's
Department of Motor Vehicles.
Navigation
Navigation aids have varied over time: from astronomical observation, to mechanical mechanisms, and more recently analogue and digital computer devices that now rely on
GPS systems.
Weapons
Naval weapon systems have closely followed the development in land weapons, developing from:
*
aircraft carriers
*breech-loading rifled guns
*direct enemy hull ramming to use of basic mechanical projectiles
*firing shells
*missiles and remotely piloted devices
*
naval mine layers and
minesweeper
*smooth-bore cannonball firing guns
*
torpedo-armed
submarines
*warships armed with fire control directed weapons
Until development of steam propulsion was coupled with rapid-firing breech-loading guns, naval combat was often concluded by a boarding combat between the opposing crews. Since the early 20th century, there has been a substantial development in technologies which allow force projection from a naval task force to a land objective using marine infantry.
See also
*
Canal
*
Ferry
*
Glossary of nautical terms
*
IMO numbers
*
Lake freighter
*
Maritime history
*
Merchant vessel
*
Navigability
*
Roll-on/roll-off
*
Ship registration
*
Ship transport
*
Train ferry
*
Unmanned surface vehicle
*
Waterway
References
External links
The Canadian Museum of Civilization - Native Watercraft in CanadaA History of Recreational Small WatercraftRecreational Watercraft
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Category:Water transport
Category:Naval architecture
Category:Ship registration