As much as 4% of the sand on Normandy's Omaha Beach is broken-down shrapnel. |
World History |
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On a quieter day 44 years later, geologists Earle McBride and Dane Picard scooped a sample of sand from the high-tide point of Omaha Beach for closer examination. Among their findings, which were published in the September 2011 edition of The Sedimentary Record and the January 5, 2012, edition of Earth magazine, were a significant number of "angular opaque grains that were magnetic." They eventually realized that these grains, ranging in size from .06 to 1.0 millimeters, were shrapnel shards that had been broken down into tiny pieces. They concluded that the shards made up 4% of the total sample. Additionally, they found 30 slightly larger iron and glass beads, believed to be the result of high-temperature munitions explosions in the sand and air. | |
The geologists pointed out, however, that the 4% figure doesn't represent the entirety of Omaha Beach, as wave breaks and currents can disrupt grain distribution on a daily basis. What's more, because of the corrosion accelerated by rust and waves, there was already a drop in the concentration of beach shrapnel in the years between when the sample was collected and when the results were published. Which means that while beachgoers today still walk among these fleeting remnants of one of history's most important military engagements, nature will sweep them away for good within the next century or so. | |
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A misdirection campaign helped the Allies disguise their D-Day plans. | |||||||||
Of all the factors that contributed to the Allied victory on D-Day, perhaps the most underrated was the successful deployment of misdirection tactics grouped under the code name Operation Bodyguard. Since beginning construction on their 2,400-mile "Atlantic Wall" coastal defense in 1942, the Nazis had been carefully monitoring the French city of Calais, the closest point between Great Britain and continental Europe, anticipating an Allied attack. Exploiting this, Allied double agents informed their German superiors that an invasion of the area was imminent, while deliberately leaked radio communication seemingly confirmed those plans. The Allies also drew attention to the buildup of a dummy fighting force in Southeast England, and even sent an actor impersonating British Field Marshal Bernard Montgomery on a phony reconnaissance mission to the Mediterranean. Although the Germans weren't entirely caught flat-footed when the long-awaited strike finally emerged at Normandy, some 150 miles southwest of Calais, the various deceptions had thinned their defenses enough to benefit the Allied troops. | |||||||||
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