Portuguese designed better ships called caravels. This was done by the Portuguese to help them sail across rough seas.
because of your mom
Caravels were a type of small, highly maneuverable sailing ship developed by the Portuguese in the 15th century. They were better than the ships they replaced, such as cogs and carracks, because they had a more streamlined hull design, allowing for greater speed and agility. Caravels also had triangular lateen sails that could catch wind from different directions, enabling them to sail closer to the wind and explore new trade routes more efficiently.
A ship can sail anywhere the water is deep enough.
Well, back then people used the traditional square sails. So when the Caravel was built they used triangular sails instead of the traditional square sails which made the ship able to sail against the wind.
The caravels allowed them to sail closer to the wind than their predecessors.
the reason why caravels could sail against the wind is because they had a very big triangular cloth which would let them flow with the wind
A lateen sail. Was/is able to be moved left or right. It made/makes ships easier to turn.
ships could sail against the wind.
Two improvements made by the Portuguese in shipbuilding were the development of the caravel, a smaller and more maneuverable type of ship that was well-suited for exploration and trade, and the use of lateen sails that allowed ships to sail more effectively against the wind. These advancements played a crucial role in the Portuguese Age of Discovery.
Ships that are hardened against iceberg damage can sail to any part of the Antarctic continent, since the continent is surrounded by the Southern Ocean.
No the Caravel had a lateen and a square sail and was steered by rudders. The lateen sail aloud it to sail against the wind