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Warfare in World War

Mustard gas, used in chemical warfare in World War I, has been found to be an effective agent in the chemotherapy of Hodgkins disease. It can be produced according to the following reaction ... [Pg.349]

Ulrich Trumpener. The Road to Ypres The Beginnings of Gas Warfare in World War I. Journal of Modern History. 47 (1975) 460-80. Source for Ypres. [Pg.213]

A. M. Low, Modem Armaments (London Scientific Book Club, 1939), pp. 108—16 Rolf-Dieter Muller, Total war as a result of new weapons The use of chemical agents in World War F, in Roger Chickering and Stig Forster (eds.) Great War Total War Combat and Mobilization on the Western Front, 1914—1918 (Cambridge University Press, 2000), pp.95—111 Albert Palazzo, Seeking Victory on the Western Front The British Army and Chemical Warfare in World War I (Lincoln University of Nebraska Press, 2000), pp. 123, 185-7. [Pg.61]

Palazzo, Albert, Seeking Victory on the Western Front The British Army and Chemical Warfare in World War I, Lincoln University of Nebraska Press, 2000. [Pg.362]

Phosgene, COCl2(g), is a toxic gas used as an agent of warfare in World War I. [Pg.339]

Major Charles E. Heller, USAR, Chemical Warfare in World War I The American Experience, 1917-1918, Combined Arms Research Library, Command and General Staff College, Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, Leavenworth Papers (hereafter cited as Leavenworth Papers), No. 10, p. 17. [Pg.168]

H. Oschsner, op. cit., History of German Chemical Warfare in World War II. [Pg.173]

Heller, C.E. (2005) Chemical Warfare in World War I The American Experience, 1917—1918. University Press of the Pacific. [Pg.38]

Williams, P., Wallace, D. (1989). Unit 731 Japan s Secret Biological Warfare in World War II. Free Press, New York. [Pg.269]

Phosgene (CCbO) is a colorless gas that was used as an agent of chemical warfare in World War I. It has the odor of newly mown hay (which is a good warning if you know the smell of newly mown hay). [Pg.220]

D. Richter, "Chemical Soldiers - British Gas Warfare in World War I", University Press of Kansas, Lawrence, 1992. [Pg.839]

Medical History. 1959. The 3rd division at Chateau Thierry July 1918. In US Army Chemical Corps Plistorical Studies Gas Warfare in World War I. US Army Chemical Corps Historical Office 91, Study 14. Meyerhoff, J.L., L.A. Lumley, C.L. Robison, et al. 2005. Chronic social stress in mice is associated with... [Pg.649]

Chapter I The Introduction of Gas Warfare in World War I., pg. 3. Leavenworth Papers Paper 10, C.E. Heller, USAR, Combat Studies Institute, US Army Command and General Staff College, (1984)... [Pg.148]

Fig. 2-1. Theodore A. Hoffman patented this respirator in 1866. It is representative of the already developing protective mask designs of the post-American Civil War era. Ironically, these masks were superior to the ad hoc emergency masks used by the Allies after the Germans began chemical warfare in World War I. Reprinted from US Patent No. 58,255 25 Sep 1866. Fig. 2-1. Theodore A. Hoffman patented this respirator in 1866. It is representative of the already developing protective mask designs of the post-American Civil War era. Ironically, these masks were superior to the ad hoc emergency masks used by the Allies after the Germans began chemical warfare in World War I. Reprinted from US Patent No. 58,255 25 Sep 1866.
Heller CE (1984) Chemical warfare in World War 1 the American experience, 1917-1918. Leavenworth Papers No. 10, Fort Leavenworth... [Pg.43]

Sason No Very few of them are chemists, like Fritz Haber who designed and was in charge of the chemical warfare in World War Others are politicians who accept such advice and press upon scientists to produce more powerful weapons, or allow sloppy practices in chemical firms in the name of caring for employment. [Pg.313]

See Ulrich Trumpener, "The road to Ypers. The beginnings of gas-warfare in World War One," Journal of modern history, 47 (1975), 460-480 Ludwig F. Haber, The poisonous cloud Chemical warfare in the first world war (Oxford, 1986). [Pg.229]

Seventeenth report of the CDRD, 31 March 1937, PRO, WO 33/1484. See also Minutes of 221 Meeting of the CID, 25 February 1927 Ninth report of the CWRD, 31 March 1929 and Offensive Gas Warfare Methods , Enclosure 45A, 7 September 1936, PRO, CAB 2/5 WO 33/1204 WO 32/3663. See also H. Ochsner, History of German Chemical Warfare in World War II Part I the Military Aspect (Historical Office of the Chief of the Chemical Corps, 1949) p. 15. [Pg.222]

Phosgene, COCI2, is a poisonous gas that was used for warfare in World War I. What is its percentage composition ... [Pg.177]


See other pages where Warfare in World War is mentioned: [Pg.173]    [Pg.757]    [Pg.65]    [Pg.20]    [Pg.106]    [Pg.727]    [Pg.215]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.18 , Pg.333 , Pg.353 ]




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