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  2. Einstein gives shocking explanation for breaking into new ...

    www.aol.com/news/einstein-gives-shocking...

    Davidson County Sheriff Daron Hall, explains how he discovered a gun hidden inside the wall of the jail in the visitation area that was hidden by Alex Friedmann, at the Downtown Detention Center ...

  3. Casemate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Casemate

    The three different types included freestanding casemate walls, then integrated ones where the inner wall was part of the outer buildings of the settlement, and finally filled casemate walls, where the rooms between the walls were filled with soil right away, allowing for a quick, but nevertheless stable construction of particularly high walls ...

  4. British hardened field defences of World War II - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/British_hardened_field...

    The walls are about 20 by 19 feet (6.1 by 5.8 m) long, constructed to shell-proof specification at about 42 inches (107 cm) thick. There is a very large forward embrasure. It was designed to take a 2 pounder anti-tank gun or a Hotchkiss 6pdr gun. The gun shield of the artillery piece would largely fill the aperture.

  5. Hesco bastion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hesco_bastion

    Assembling the HESCO unit entails unfolding it and filling it with sand, soil or gravel, usually using a front end loader.The placement of the barrier is generally very similar to the placement of a sandbag barrier or earth berm except that room must generally be allowed for the equipment used to fill the barrier.

  6. Defensive fighting position - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Defensive_fighting_position

    An Indian Wehrmacht volunteer in a Tobruk DFP along the Atlantic Wall, 1944. During the fighting in North Africa (1942–43), U.S. forces employed the shell scrape.This was a very shallow excavation allowing one soldier to lie horizontally while shielding his body from nearby shell bursts and small arms fire.

  7. Wire obstacle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wire_obstacle

    The effectiveness of any wire obstacle is greatly increased by planting anti-tank and blast antipersonnel mines in and around it. Additionally, connecting bounding anti-personnel mines (e.g. the PROM-1) to the obstacle with tripwires has the effect of booby-trapping the obstacle itself, hindering attempts to clear it.

  8. Wall gun - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wall_gun

    The wall gun or wall piece was a type of smoothbore firearm used in the 16th through 19th centuries by defending forces to break the advance of enemy troops. Essentially, it was a scaled-up version of the army's standard infantry musket , operating under the same principles, but with a bore of up to one-inch (25.4 mm) calibre .

  9. Mantlet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mantlet

    A mantlet was a portable wall or shelter used for stopping projectiles in medieval warfare. It could be mounted on a wheeled carriage, and protected one or several soldiers. In the First World War a mantlet type of device was used by the French to attack barbed wire entanglements. [1]