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World War I

World War I. The war to end all wars. By The Numbers. Mobilized Dead Wounded Missing/PoW Russia 12,000,000 1,700,000 4,950,000 2,500,000 Germany 11,000,000 1,773,700 4,216,058 1,152,800

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World War I

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  1. World War I The war to end all wars

  2. By The Numbers

  3. MobilizedDeadWoundedMissing/PoW Russia 12,000,000 1,700,000 4,950,000 2,500,000 Germany 11,000,000 1,773,700 4,216,058 1,152,800 Great Britain 8,904,467 908,371 2,090,212 191,652 France 8,410,000 1,375,800 3,266,000 537,000 Austria-Hungary 7,800,000 1,200,000 3,620,000 2,200,000 Italy 5,615,000 650,000 947,000 600,000 US 4,355,000 126,000 234,300 4,526 Turkey 2,850,000 325,000 400,000 250,000 Bulgaria 1,200,000 87,500 152,390 27,029 Japan 800,000 300 907 3 Romania 750,000 335,706 120,000 80,000 Serbia 707,343 45,000 133,148 152,958 Belgium 267,000 13,716 44,686 34,659 Greece 230,000 5,000 21,000 1,000 Portugal 100,000 7,222 13,751 12,318 Montenegro 50,000 3,000 10,000 7,000

  4. The Soldiers

  5. French soldiers waiting for their meal.

  6. Trench with French soldiers

  7. The Shell-Shattered Area of Chateau Wood, Flanders

  8. Scene in the trenches

  9. Looking out from the entrance of a captured Pill-Box on to the shell ravaged battlefield.

  10. German POW, Spring 1918

  11. Child Soldiers

  12. Poison Gas

  13. The three main types used were - chlorine, phosgene and mustard gas. Chlorine- a greenish, yellow heavier than air gas which in its pure form is an oxidizing agent. This means that it will react in the presence of water to cause a chemical burning effect on organic matter. Mucus tissues of the human body are susceptible to such chemical reaction because of 1) their organic nature and , 2) they are always covered with a film of water. Symptoms of chlorine gas poisoning include vomiting, difficulty in breathing, a burning sensation in the lungs, eyes, nasal and mouth passages, watery eyes. In severe cases, cell damage in the lungs leads to fluid buildup in the lungs, loss of consciousness through suffocation, and death. Phosgene - a colourless, odorless, heavier than air gas formed by heating carbon tetrachloride. It is highly poisonous in that it will preferentially replace oxygen in the cells and quickly causes an oxygen debt within the body, unconsciousness and death. Mustard gas- a caustic gas with a distinctive mustard smell, it causes blistering and huge sores on any exposed tissue, internal or external. Probably the most used gas, with phosgene, in the war. A nasty piece of business.

  14. Poison Gas Attacks

  15. American soldier wearing his gas mask

  16. Gas attack seen from an airplane

  17. Gas masks for man and horse demonstrated by American soldier

  18. Effects of Mustard Gas

  19. Trench Warfare

  20. British Trench Diagrams Taken from the British reference manual on Trench Warfare, British Trench Warfare 1917-1918. The manual was originally prepared by the General Staff at the British War Office

  21. Schematic Illustration of trenches from a French magazine.

  22. German trenches

  23. Soldiers of the US 332 Infantry, 83rd Division in trenches with the Italians on the Piave

  24. US 18th Infantry, 1st Division troops in front line trench, 20 Jan 1918

  25. “Hand-grenade Combat”

  26. Russians fighting while under gas attack

  27. German machine gun trench

  28. Death on the Battlefield

  29. Dead French soldiers in the Argonne German remains at Verdun

  30. Death of a French regiment near Peronne

  31. German dead in frontline trench on the Somme, 1916 Russian soldier dead on the wire

  32. Destruction

  33. Mt. Grappa

  34. Avoncourt, France

  35. Rheims, France

  36. Shell Craters On The Battlefield

  37. Verdun: Cloister of the Hotel de la Princerie

  38. Village of Esnes

  39. Weapons of War

  40. Machine Guns

  41. Barbed Wire

  42. Flamethrowers

  43. Periscope Rifle

  44. Phosphorus Grenade Exploding

  45. Austrian Skoda 305mm howitzer

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