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 | Detailed aerial view, Exit D3, taken 6 June 1944 at 1230 hrs.
(Photograph U.S. National Archives)
See also overall view of Easy Red:
http://www.gearthhacks.com/dlfile25563/Omaha-Beach,-6-June-1944-(Overlay-I).htm |  | 05/30/2007 | 833 | 



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 | Detailed aerial view, Exit E1, taken 6 June 1944 at 1230 hrs.
(Photograph U.S. National Archives)
See also overall view of Easy Red:
http://www.gearthhacks.com/dlfile25563/Omaha-Beach,-6-June-1944-(Overlay-I).htm |  | 05/30/2007 | 729 | 



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 | Invasion Map for Normandy's Omaha beach west
Link to source
|  | 08/04/2005 | 2,955 | 



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 | This photo shows the advance from Omaha Beach between exits D-3 and E-1 with the direction St.Laurent. |  | 05/11/2006 | 969 | 



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 | D-Day 6th of June 1944 - Sectores in US landing area "Omaha Beach" |  | 09/04/2005 | 999 | 
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 | An aerial reconnaissance picture of Gold Beach during D-Day.
Gold Beach was the Allied codename for the centre invasion beach during the World War II Allied invasion of Normandy, June 6, 1944. It lay between Omaha Beach and Juno Beach, was 8km wide and divided into four sectors. From West to East they were How, Item, Jig, and King.
The grim task of invading Gold Be... |  | 08/10/2005 | 1,089 | 
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 | A map of the operations of the V Corps (Commander Maj. Gen. Leonard T. Gerow) during D-Day. |  | 08/10/2005 | 2,175 | 
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 | Mulberry harbour at Arromanches, Normandy, in September 1944. These prefabricated floating harbours, constructed three days after the initial landings, were used to offload men and equipment at Gold and Omaha beaches. The harbour at Omaha beach was destroyed within 10 days, but the Arromanches harbour at Gold beach provided an essential landing base for Allies forces for 8 months, landing milli... |  | 10/23/2008 | 334 | 
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 | Aerial view, Easy red sector between Exit D3 and Exit E1, taken 6 June 1944 at 1230 hrs.
(Photograph U.S. National Archives) |  | 05/30/2007 | 758 | 



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 | A Mulberry Harbour was a type of temporary harbour developed in World War II to offload cargo on a beach during the Allied invasion of Normandy.
By June 9, just 3 days after D-Day, two harbours codenamed Mulberry 'A' and 'B' were constructed at Omaha Beach and Arromanches, respectively. However, a large storm on June 19 destroyed the American harbour at Omaha, leaving only the Br... |  | 08/05/2005 | 895 | 



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 | Tolverne is a small landing stage where members of the 29th Infantry left England to attack Omaha Beach. Tolverne is situated north of the King Harry Ferry crossing on the river Fal, again north of Falmouth, Cornwall.
The whole of Great Britain was a vast armed camp by 1944. For D-Day the British/Canadian's were held in camps from Bournemouth on the south coast all the way up to... |  | 09/30/2008 | 723 | 



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 | Another view of Mulberries A at Omaha beach
A multibeam echo sounder underwater view of the sunken Omaha WW2 artificial harbour.
Usually those datas are in 3D
You can even see a big ship tanked in the harbour.
The name of this ship is the SS Exford
Datas acquired during Neptune 2K expedition.
Copyright Steeve Schmidt, Naval Historical center
More... |  | 01/28/2006 | 508 | 



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