, Egypt, c. 2500 BC model and replica tools,
Britain, c. 2000 BC The earliest surviving examples of plank-built boats are the
Abydos boats, the earliest of which is dated to . These are sewn boats. The investigated example, BG10, had an unusual sewing technique, with the continuous fibrous strap running at right angles to the long direction of the planks. Therefore each length of strap went through all the planks on that side of the vessel. In contrast, other sewn boats that use continuous sewing (as opposed to a series of individual stitches) have the thread go along the seam between two planks. A well-known early example of a sewn boat is the long "solar barque" or funerary boat on show near the Gizeh pyramid in Egypt; it dates back from c. 2500 BC. The sewn construction was a natural step when coming from raft or reed boatbuilding, which dates from some thousands of years before that. The oldest sea-going vessel was the
Zambratija boat in Croatia, c. 1200 BC. In other parts of the world, the oldest sewn craft comes from
North Ferriby, where one sample (called
F3) mass-spectrometry dates to 2030 BC. Later finds include some early Greek ships. The oldest Nordic find is the
Hjortspring boat in Denmark (c 300 BC). In
Finland,
Russia,
Karelia and
Estonia small sewn boats have been constructed more recently; until the 1920s in poor areas of Russia. Sewn construction is used in the various forms of the
Austronesian "
proas" of the
Indo-Pacific (which also used the
lashed-lug techniques) and the
Middle Eastern and
South Asian
dhow native to the Red Sea, Persian Gulf, and Indian Ocean. Despite their proximity and similarity, they differ markedly from each other, indicating that they developed independently. Austronesian boat-sewing techniques are discontinuous and are only visible from the inside surfaces of the hull, while South Asian and Middle Eastern boat-sewing techniques are visible in both the exterior and interior of the hull and are continuous. == Comparison with other traditions ==