Depleted Uranium munitions anyone?
What is it that so fascinates us (on this forum) about something so horrendous as war?
Depleted Uranium munitions anyone?
What is it that so fascinates us (on this forum) about something so horrendous as war?
Scary stuff indeed. A couple years back a Civil War collector in Virginia was killed by an old Civil War artillery shell he was handling. Pieces of that shell hit a house a quarter mile away, but thankfully no one else was hurt. They'll probably still be finding stuff from WW2 for many years to come.
"He is no fool who gives what he cannot keep to gain that which he cannot lose." *Jim Elliot*
Here's some neat facts on WW1 munitions.
-1 in 8 (estimated) shells and other assorted explosive devices launched in the great war never went off.
-Several hundred million such devices were launched in the 4 years of the great war, do the math
-The French government, based on current rate of de-mining matched against estimates of explosives to be found in the ground in north east France, estimate that all of France will clear and safe of unexploded munitions in about 700 years*
-Many French farmers in the area where the trenches churn up grenades arty shells and such like with their tillers, and leave for the de-miners with their garbage.
*Although this might include all of France and both world wars
Last edited by lars573; 06-03-2010 at 05:14.
If you havin' skyrim problems I feel bad for you son.. I dodged 99 arrows but my knee took one.
VENI, VIDI, NATES CALCE CONCIDI
I came, I saw, I kicked ass
I think they find every year some old Russian and German bombs and other stuff in eastern part of Estonia. I remember that some 15 years ago some kids found a bomb a threw it in the fire .. for fun. 2-3 kids died while several got serious wounds.
Well, I grew up in Brest and Lorient and I can remember maybe twelve times in my first twenty years of life parts of the city beeing evacuated in order to neutralize US and British bombs of WWII. And it's still going on today once or twice a year.
At least, as far as we know, every Tallboy bomb droped on Lorient exploded on arrival.
Last edited by Tristuskhan; 06-03-2010 at 20:09.
"Les Cons ça ose tout, c'est même à ça qu'on les reconnait"
Kentoc'h Mervel Eget Bezañ Saotret - Death feels better than stain, motto of the Breton People. Emgann!
Relics of wars long past posses aspects of facination and awe to many, collectors and non alike. Perhaps part of this appeal is the connection to the past and the fact that the now entombed once touched and used them. However, thier real use and potential can be quite obvious now, as it was when such relics were new.
Silence is beautiful
Sad for those families.
We still lose the occasional collector to civil war ordinance (1861-1865), though it's really rare, bu that means it is sadly unsurprising that stuff from 1944 is still about and still lethal.
"The only way that has ever been discovered to have a lot of people cooperate together voluntarily is through the free market. And that's why it's so essential to preserving individual freedom.” -- Milton Friedman
"The urge to save humanity is almost always a false front for the urge to rule." -- H. L. Mencken
Sad indeed for those loved ones, who could ever imagine such a thing happening. If you really want to scare yourself google "america's lost h bomb". I remembered the one lost near Savannah Georgia, but the other two....![]()
"He is no fool who gives what he cannot keep to gain that which he cannot lose." *Jim Elliot*
I still occasionally hear about old bombs being found. A lot of the areas round near where I live were some of the most heavily bombed due to the fact that the area is so industrialised (Clydebank in particular was really devastated).
At the end of the day politics is just trash compared to the Gospel.
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