if there were no boats and ships what difficulty would we have to face
Answers
Answer:Collision (striking a moving object) or allision (striking a stationary object).
Striking marine debris (flotsam, jetsam, deadhead logs, etc)
Grounding on shoals, rocks or shore.
Loss of propulsive power or steering control.
Fire or explosion.
Taking water through hull (crack, hole, through-hull connections) or by downflooding (waves, immersion of deck edge), leading to foundering, capsize or sinking.
Capsize from wave action, from wind or from shifting weights aboard.
Failure of electrical power (affects navigation equipment, communications eqt, propulsion, etc.)
Failure of hydraulic power (affects steering, windlass, cargo eqt., etc.)
Piracy and other types of criminal activity.
Acts of war.
Mutiny. and other forms of crewing problems.
Disorientation due to reduced visibility (fog, rain, snow, sea-smoke)
Injuries and illness to crew, or personnel going overboard.
Cargo shifting aboard (or overboard) or other damage due to cargo (e.g. rice expands when wet and can split open the hull).
Structural damage from waves, from metal fatique, from corrosion or rot.
Out of fuel, or becalmed due to lack of wind.
Stranded in ice, damage from ice.
Financial problems of owners.
The most common problem: human error in all its forms
Answer:
Travelling in water
Explanation:
Transporting petrol ex suez canal
air would be difficult