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BURIED SHELLS.

battle-field dangers after

the war is over

An odd problem, which will* bo encountered all through the fighting territory after the war, is that of guarding against the exploding of shells which buried themselves in the ground ■without having exploded, In the section of France along the Marne, where lighting was sharp early in the war and from which the Germans retreated. the peasant farmers already have found this danger to be real. A ploughman at any moment may strike 'a shell 1 that will explode with sufficient force to kill him and his team Various solutions have been suggested, but the most promising is one worked out by a French scientist and considered by the Academy of Science. The plan is to go all over the farms : with an, electrical instrument that will give warning when a mass of metal is near. Such an instrument' is an old (American frequently used in laboratory work. Some modifications of it were adopted by the French scientist to fit it for field use, and his apparatus requires the services of two men. In practical tests on the o’Al battlefields he found that it is possible for two men to explore an acre thoroughly in about one hour, and locate every buried shell near enough to the ; face to do any harm.

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/TAIDT19160306.2.4

Bibliographic details

Taihape Daily Times, Volume 8, Issue 56, 6 March 1916, Page 2

Word Count
221

BURIED SHELLS. Taihape Daily Times, Volume 8, Issue 56, 6 March 1916, Page 2

BURIED SHELLS. Taihape Daily Times, Volume 8, Issue 56, 6 March 1916, Page 2

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