Fotopedia > Artillery
Artillery 3rd Battalion, 319th Field Artillery Regiment Field artillery
 
 
0
 
Your clipboard is empty.
You can drop photos from your desktop here to upload them.
 
photo by
Camouflaged equipment
Here Comes the Boom
Fire in the Hole!
Merville Gun Battery
Artillery
BOOM
Rotate to exit slide mode
Artillery

Artillery is a weapon of war that operates by projection of munitions far beyond the effective range of personal weapons. Artillery comprise specialised devices which use some form of stored energy to operate, whether mechanical, chemical, or electromagnetic. Originally designed to breach fortifications, they have evolved from nearly static installations intended to reduce a single obstacle to highly mobile weapons of great flexibility in which now reposes the greater portion of a modern army's offensive capabilities.

Originally artillery was any group of infantry primarily armed with projectile weapons. Since the development of cannon, the word "artillery" in practice has largely meant cannon; in contemporary usage it usually refers to shell-firing guns, howitzers, mortars, and rockets. In common speech the word artillery is individual devices, together with their accessories and fittings, although these assemblages are more properly called equipment. By association, artillery may also refer to the arm of service that customarily operates such engines.

Artillery is the most lethal form of land-based armament; in the Napoleonic Wars, World War I and World War II the vast majority of combat deaths were caused by artillery. In 1944, Joseph Stalin said in a speech that artillery was "the God of War".

TEXT FROM WIKIPEDIA, cba SOME RIGHTS RESERVED.
3rd Battalion, 319th Field Artillery Regiment

The 3rd Battalion, 319th Field Artillery Regiment (3–319th AFAR) is a field artillery battalion that is part of the 319th Field Artillery Regiment and directly supports the 1st Brigade Combat Team, 82nd Airborne Division. Known as the "Gun Devils", 3–319th AFAR has participated in battles from World War I to the current day, and is one of the most highly decorated field artillery units in the United States Army.

TEXT FROM WIKIPEDIA, cba SOME RIGHTS RESERVED.
 My Pictures  Community Pictures  on Fotopedia  on Flickr 
 
  
advanced options
 Entire Content  Title  Author 
 Upload Pictures 
 Cancel  Ok 
Tweet
Message
 Cancel  OK  Other 
 
 Cancel  OK  Other