Shipwreck is a structure that occurs mainly in the ocean. Sometimes they happen rarely in the river and also on the beach
Shipwrecks are produced on all seas, rivers and beaches. They may also produce icebergs inside. [Base stone version only] [Test required]
The shape of a shipwreck resembles a classic yacht or pirate ship. They are manufactured in three ways: upright, sideways, or upside down. In many cases, they lose something that seems to be bow, fuselage, mast, and other, but they can also be found cleanly. They consist only of trees, including logs, peeled logs, planks, fences, stairs, falling doors and doors. In addition to the acacia wood, all wood variants are used for wreck ship construction, but usually it is made of only two woods at a time (spruce + dark oak, birch + oak, jungle + Spruce and the like).
On the shipwreck, 1 to 3 boxes containing loot are included. The supply box is manufactured at the bow of the ship, there is a treasure box at the top of the stern, and there is a box at the bottom. If a part of the ship is missing, the corresponding part of the treasure box will also be lost.
The debris destroys the remains of the ship and finds them left behind on the ground or sinks to the bottom of the water. Shipbuilding mistakes may be deliberate or chance. In January 1999, Angela Croome estimated that there are about 3 million wrecks worldwide (estimated by UNESCO and other organizations soon). Historic remnants are charming as they preserve historical information for maritime archaeologists. For example, researching the remains of Mary Rose will reveal information about voyages, wars, and lives of the 16th century. Examine the military debris caused by maritime conflict to find out more about historical events; they reveal the fight done. Discovery of treasure ships is usually sunk in remote areas since the European colonial period, few living witnesses like Batavia.
To make the story easy, let's say that 10 voyages are required to compensate for the cost of the ship, and one out of 20 voyages is a shipwreck. Suddenly, your life depends greatly on luck. If your wreckage took place on your eleventh voyage, you already have enough money to purchase a new ship and proceed. If a shipwreck occurred on the tenth voyage, you failed. Soon, we found a way for pretty wealthy people to solve this problem. They will provide an "insurance contract" and shipowners will pay a boat cost of 1 / 20th before each voyage, they will be killed and they will get the full amount of the new ship. Both parties are satisfied. On average, the insurance company charged a fee for each voyage and the owner changed the unpredictable, potentially devastating costs to a predictable and predictable cost.