Wooden sailing ships.
Viking ships were long wooden ships that held 10-20 men and were moved by oars or sails. They were not equiped for battle and were used to carry men to raid or to battle on land.
Wooden Ships was created in 1969.
Food and water on ships of the time of the Endeavour were kept on the lower decks. Foodstuffs were kept in large tea chests and wooden crates, while water was kept in wooden barrels.
All commissioned U S Navy warships are made of mostly steel. Some warships from WW II remain as floating museums and some of those ships have wooden decks.
Concrete patios a typically cheaper then wooden decks. Concrete patios are made to resist winter weather. Wooden decks require treating, and cleaning. If the question if over price, then I would go with the patios, cheaper in the long run.
St Helens on the Isle of Wight was a big supplier of sea salt to the Royal Navy, also a supplier of holy stones for cleaning wooden ships' decks.
lazaretto
It was the first recorded naval battle between ironclad (ships with iron hulls) ships. Until that battle, all others had been between wooden sailing vessels, or the occasional ironclad against wooden sailing vessel. It signified a new era in naval warfare.
They haven't stopped yet. However, the beginning of the end for wooden ships was the battle between the Monitor and the Merrimac during the US Civil War. Although they were iron-clad wooden ships, the advantage of metal warships was apparent when bullets and cannon balls bounced off of them. There were many technological advances during the last quarter of the 19th century and by the end of the century no major country was building wooden warships.
Generally First Class was on the ships upper decks, and the lower classes were on lower decks.
The bilge.