That is unknown. There have been thousands of ships that have sunk in history and most of them still remain. Early ships of the Vikings and similar seafarers are undocumented. Many Roman and Greek galleys sank and the records lost in time. Same is true of the ships of Ancient China, Egypt and the rest of the world. Even the more recent history with the wars of the 1800 and 1900's have gaps and missing records for war ships.
1000s over the centuries
Not in the deep open ocean. Out there a tsunami will pass unnoticed under boats.
the may flower ship is like a boat that is in the ocean the may flower ship is like a boat that is in the ocean
the may flower ship is like a boat that is in the ocean the may flower ship is like a boat that is in the ocean
Yes. It hit an iceberg and sunk on April 15, 1912. It has since been located at the bottom of the Atlantic Ocean.
a ship
Indian ocean will have to be crossed by a ship going from Singapore to magadishu.
The ship would be in the Indian Ocean.
The Titanic is rusting and, after a few decades, the ship will be nothing but an orange spot of debris on the sea floor.
An ocean greyhound is simply a fast ship.
This depends on many things, the size of the ship, the displacement (mass, but on water), number of motors, etc. Typically a ship has one or two, and up to as many as 4 for average lake and ocean going vessels.
The Suez Canal is the quickest way by ship to get from the Mediterranean to the Indian Ocean.
Camels are referred to as 'Ships of the Desert' because they move one side's limbs in unison, creating a rhythmic, see-sawing motion for any rider. This is not unlike the percieved 'motion of the ocean' under a ship.