Related Files | Rating | Date Added | Downloads | |
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 | Aerial picture of the area between Remagen and Kripp with bomb craters. The picture was taken from a british recon aircraft at 30 January 1945. |  | 06/22/2007 | 676 | 



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 | Lots of craters all over the place.
Editor's note: Extremely large crater, undoubtedly from an atomic bomb test. Entire area, particularly going south from here, is littered with nuclear test sites and attendant craters. |  | 07/21/2005 | 31,172 | 



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 | Bomb craters in a runway near Belgrade in Serbia |  | 09/24/2005 | 676 | 



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 | Two symmetrical pit craters side-by-side, one of the few examples of this type of crater in the U.S. The pit craters, which were lava conduits, were formed by explosions and then a collapse. |  | 11/11/2008 | 454 | 



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 | A Navy AD-3 "Skyraider" attack plane pulls out of its dive (top center) after dropping a 2000-pound bomb on the Korean side of a bridge over the Yalu River, at Sinuiju, North Korea. Note bomb craters in the vicinity of the bridges.
Photograph is dated 15 November 1950, but may have been taken a few days earlier. |  | 11/04/2006 | 373 | 



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 | Possible location of the 454th and 455th Bomb Group base during WWII. |  | 11/05/2005 | 283 | 



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 | The picture of a bomb raid during WWII shows heavy hits around the Central Station. |  | 08/13/2005 | 327 | 
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 | This picture was taken on 23 April 1945 and shows the moonscape like island. The large craters are from the 5 tons Tallboy bombs, which where dropped in the air raid.
Helgoland, April 18/19, 1945
969 aircraft - 617 Avro Lancasters, 332 Handley Page Halifaxes, 20 de Havilland Mosquitos of all groups - successfully used Tallboys to bomb the Naval base, airfield, and town int... |  | 10/23/2008 | 910 | 
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 | Nice picture of the Arkenu double impact craters in Libya. |  | 07/30/2005 | 1,507 | 



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 | This site was originally a gas works with two gas holders (built 1875). The holes left by the gas holders were converted in World War 2 for use as bomb shelter 'citadels' - the North Rotunda and the South Rotunda. The Rotundas were designed to survive the impact of a 500lb bomb and had 12 foot thick concrete roofs. In 1943 the lowest level of the North Rotunda (codenamed Anson) was kitted out... |  | 02/11/2006 | 486 | 
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 | Built on a 35 acre WWII bomb site, The Barbican is both a major arts complex and an area of exclusive high rise dwellings, surrounding the only building to survive the bombing, St Giles Cripplegate, on which the placemark sits. |  | 09/24/2005 | 169 | 



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 | Historical interest - archive WWII air photo matching surviving relic structures. Although no longer physically visible on the ground, the surviving runway layout is clearly visible from the air - enhanced by the dry conditions - and ties in well to the WWII imagery. |  | 06/20/2007 | 766 | 
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