Yes, but you can get cardboard caskets.
No, you are not required to purchase a burial vault for someone who was cremated to bury their ashes. Many cemeteries allow cremated remains to be buried directly in the ground or placed in a columbarium niche without the need for a vault. However, some cemeteries may have specific regulations or preferences, so it's best to check with the cemetery for their policies regarding the burial of ashes.
In the whole vampires curse island there is no casket that you need to worry about. There is a casket though in the room where Kayta is in a cage.
The man who makes a casket does not need it; the man who buys a casket does not use it; the man who uses a casket does not know he does.
Yes. You need to provide the court with proof of the death.
you need a head casket
If your computer has a sound card there is no need to purchase a new one.
Casket!
You need 1 stored finisher and 1 unstored finsher. Irish Whip them to the middle of the casket then press L1 to perform your finisher.
There is no need to put anything, decomposition will happen naturally.
you need to use witch eye root from Casket Hill
In the US, there is no law requiring the casket to be placed in a vault. But many cemeteries make such request because they want to avoid the caving in of graves as a result of either the deterioration of the casket or the use of heavy machinery for maintaing the cemetery.
The costs vary by airline and by what condition the remains are in. They go by air frieght, so in addition to the special packaging you get charged for weight. If the body has been cremated, you just need a sealed urn in a box and the proper paperwork. An embalmed body is shipped in an FAA approved, special cardboard casket banded to a special pallet- the airlines actually have special carts just for handling these. An unembalmed body may be shipped but usually it has to be in a sealed metal casket. Cremated remains might cost $300 or more to ship cross country, an embalmed body or casket upwards of $2000 for cross country flight (plus of course the emblaming and prep work, and the container, with a steel casket easily costing thousands by itself). This does not include permits, paperwork, fuel surcharges, etc. The paperwork is extensive, so the best bet is to find a funeral home that has experience shipping bodies by airline, and let them handle everything. At a busy airport each major airline may handle a dozen bodies a day, so there is no reason to make it hard and try and do it yourself.