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English physician Charles Myers, who wrote the first paper on “shell-shock” in 1915, theorized that these symptoms actually did stem from a physical injury.
Dozens of unexploded shells from World War I were uncovered following heavy rainfall, prompting police to issue a warning to residents.
Woman's Hour WW1: 'Shell-shock' and gas attacks faced by nurses on the Front Line Professor Christine Hallett on trauma, and archive interview with WW1 nurse Elsie Knocker 12 mins Cymraeg Gaeilge ...
A Belgian utility says an unexploded World War I shell was found on the grounds of a nuclear power plant but was safely removed by military experts.
Two artillery shells found inside checked luggage by security screeners at O’Hare International Airport turned out to be about as dangerous as sea shells, but the military-grade munitions pro… ...
WWI shell found in Frenchman’s bottom A hospital was partially evacuated after a senior citizen arrived with a World War I artillery shell lodged in his rectum.
An 88-year-old French man arrived at a hospital with a First World War shell stuck in his anus, which led to the evacuation of the facility's patients.
WWI shell found in Frenchman’s bottom A hospital was partially evacuated after a senior citizen arrived with a World War I artillery shell lodged in his rectum.
WWI shell found in Frenchman’s bottom A hospital was partially evacuated after a senior citizen arrived with a World War I artillery shell lodged in his rectum.
SPOKANE VALLEY, Wash. -- Police and bomb squad units showed up to the Spokane Valley Heritage Museum Wednesday after World War I 37mm shells were donated by a local man.
New research suggests helmets used in World War I protected soldiers against overhead artillery blasts just as well as modern helmets—and one, the French ...