WWII bomb self-detonates in German field, leaves crater - 5 minutes read
WWII bomb self-detonates in German field, leaves crater
A loud explosion in a field startled residents in the town of Limburg in western Germany on Sunday. The blast occurred in the middle of the night and was large enough to register a minor tremor of 1.7 on the Richter scale, according to local media.
No injuries were reported, but the mystery explosion left a crater that measured 10 meters (33 feet) wide and 4 meters deep.
Bomb specialists from the state of Hesse determined on Monday with "a probability bordering on certainty" that it was a WWII-era unexploded bomb that caused the blast.
Prior to the news release, residents were puzzled and confused by the crater, with some online speculating that it had been caused by a meteorite.
But Rüdiger Jehn, of the European Space Agency, told German newspaper Frankfurter Neue Presse that this was false. "A great deal of heat is released during an asteroid impact," the ESA expert said, adding that no evidence of heat or melting could be seen from the crater footage.
The real culprit was an aerial bomb, which was buried at a depth of at least 4 meters, weighed 250 kilograms (550 pounds) and had a chemical detonator, investigators said. Authorities confirmed that the bomb had exploded by itself, without any external trigger.
Professor and engineer Wolfgang Spyra, of the Brandenburg University of Technology in Cottbus, told DW that a self-detonation of at WWII-era bomb is very rare in Germany and only occurs once or twice per year.
"In the case of bombs with chemical detonators, the materials of the detonator decompose over a long period of time," Spyra said. The decomposition of the detonator was the cause that authorities cited for the ignition.
Read more: WWII munitions: Time bombs at the bottom of the Baltic Sea
Limburg city spokesman Johannes Laubach told German news service NTV that finding a WWII bomb in the area was not at all surprising. "A former railway depot made this area a bombing target at the end of the war," he explained.
More than 70 years after the end of the conflict, finding unexploded bombs in Germany is a frequent occurrence. Just this month, an unexploded device was defused in a busy area of central Berlin.
"The most frequently found explosives are cluster bombs, air bombs and bombs with incendiary materials, such as white phosphorous," Spyra said.
He has warned that as bombs age and decay, they become more dangerous. This applies to both chemical detonator bombs like the one found in Limburg and conventional bombs, which tend to experience long-term corrosion.
Over time "this corrosion process leads to the weakening of the safety mechanisms within the bombs," Spyra explained.
A spokesman for the arms and munitions disposal service for the cities of Cologne and Düsseldorf echoed Spyra's assessment, telling DW that unexploded bombs in the ground "will not become less dangerous over time."
Defusing bombs – is there a safer way?
"Changes such as corrosion are visible from the outside, but any changes within the explosive ordnance cannot be detected" as the bombs are exposed to environmental changes, the spokesman said.
Between 1940 and 1945, some 2.7 million tons of bombs were dropped on Europe by US and British forces and half of them landed in Germany. Half of those that dropped in Germany landed in North Rhine-Westphalia, the country's most populous state today.
Of the roughly quarter million bombs that did not explode, thousands are still hidden underground all over Germany.
Each evening at 1830 UTC, DW's editors send out a selection of the day's hard news and quality feature journalism. You can sign up to receive it directly here.
Source: Dw.com
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Keywords:
Explosion • Limburg an der Lahn • German Empire • Explosion • Earthquake • Richter magnitude scale • Mass media • Volcanic crater • Hesse • Probability • On Certainty • Impact crater • Meteorite • European Space Agency • Nazi Germany • Frankfurter Neue Presse • Impact event • European Space Agency • Impact crater • Aerial bomb • Detonator • Brandenburg University of Technology • Cottbus • Deutsche Welle • Detonation • World War II • Reactive armour • Bomb • Nazi Germany • Bomb • Detonator • Detonator • Decomposition • Decomposition • Detonator • Combustion • Baltic Sea • Duchy of Limburg • German language • NTV (Russia) • World War II • Bomb • Bomb • End of World War II in Europe • Unexploded ordnance • Nazi Germany • Nuclear weapon • Berlin • Explosive material • Cluster munition • Atmosphere of Earth • Incendiary device • Chemical substance • Allotropes of phosphorus • Radioactive decay • Chemical warfare • Detonator • Maritime Jewel • This Corrosion • Ammunition • Cologne • Düsseldorf • Deutsche Welle • Unexploded ordnance • Corrosion • Europe • Germany • Germany • North Rhine-Westphalia • Nazi Germany • Coordinated Universal Time • Deutsche Welle • Infotainment • Feature story •
A loud explosion in a field startled residents in the town of Limburg in western Germany on Sunday. The blast occurred in the middle of the night and was large enough to register a minor tremor of 1.7 on the Richter scale, according to local media.
No injuries were reported, but the mystery explosion left a crater that measured 10 meters (33 feet) wide and 4 meters deep.
Bomb specialists from the state of Hesse determined on Monday with "a probability bordering on certainty" that it was a WWII-era unexploded bomb that caused the blast.
Prior to the news release, residents were puzzled and confused by the crater, with some online speculating that it had been caused by a meteorite.
But Rüdiger Jehn, of the European Space Agency, told German newspaper Frankfurter Neue Presse that this was false. "A great deal of heat is released during an asteroid impact," the ESA expert said, adding that no evidence of heat or melting could be seen from the crater footage.
The real culprit was an aerial bomb, which was buried at a depth of at least 4 meters, weighed 250 kilograms (550 pounds) and had a chemical detonator, investigators said. Authorities confirmed that the bomb had exploded by itself, without any external trigger.
Professor and engineer Wolfgang Spyra, of the Brandenburg University of Technology in Cottbus, told DW that a self-detonation of at WWII-era bomb is very rare in Germany and only occurs once or twice per year.
"In the case of bombs with chemical detonators, the materials of the detonator decompose over a long period of time," Spyra said. The decomposition of the detonator was the cause that authorities cited for the ignition.
Read more: WWII munitions: Time bombs at the bottom of the Baltic Sea
Limburg city spokesman Johannes Laubach told German news service NTV that finding a WWII bomb in the area was not at all surprising. "A former railway depot made this area a bombing target at the end of the war," he explained.
More than 70 years after the end of the conflict, finding unexploded bombs in Germany is a frequent occurrence. Just this month, an unexploded device was defused in a busy area of central Berlin.
"The most frequently found explosives are cluster bombs, air bombs and bombs with incendiary materials, such as white phosphorous," Spyra said.
He has warned that as bombs age and decay, they become more dangerous. This applies to both chemical detonator bombs like the one found in Limburg and conventional bombs, which tend to experience long-term corrosion.
Over time "this corrosion process leads to the weakening of the safety mechanisms within the bombs," Spyra explained.
A spokesman for the arms and munitions disposal service for the cities of Cologne and Düsseldorf echoed Spyra's assessment, telling DW that unexploded bombs in the ground "will not become less dangerous over time."
Defusing bombs – is there a safer way?
"Changes such as corrosion are visible from the outside, but any changes within the explosive ordnance cannot be detected" as the bombs are exposed to environmental changes, the spokesman said.
Between 1940 and 1945, some 2.7 million tons of bombs were dropped on Europe by US and British forces and half of them landed in Germany. Half of those that dropped in Germany landed in North Rhine-Westphalia, the country's most populous state today.
Of the roughly quarter million bombs that did not explode, thousands are still hidden underground all over Germany.
Each evening at 1830 UTC, DW's editors send out a selection of the day's hard news and quality feature journalism. You can sign up to receive it directly here.
Source: Dw.com
Powered by NewsAPI.org
Keywords:
Explosion • Limburg an der Lahn • German Empire • Explosion • Earthquake • Richter magnitude scale • Mass media • Volcanic crater • Hesse • Probability • On Certainty • Impact crater • Meteorite • European Space Agency • Nazi Germany • Frankfurter Neue Presse • Impact event • European Space Agency • Impact crater • Aerial bomb • Detonator • Brandenburg University of Technology • Cottbus • Deutsche Welle • Detonation • World War II • Reactive armour • Bomb • Nazi Germany • Bomb • Detonator • Detonator • Decomposition • Decomposition • Detonator • Combustion • Baltic Sea • Duchy of Limburg • German language • NTV (Russia) • World War II • Bomb • Bomb • End of World War II in Europe • Unexploded ordnance • Nazi Germany • Nuclear weapon • Berlin • Explosive material • Cluster munition • Atmosphere of Earth • Incendiary device • Chemical substance • Allotropes of phosphorus • Radioactive decay • Chemical warfare • Detonator • Maritime Jewel • This Corrosion • Ammunition • Cologne • Düsseldorf • Deutsche Welle • Unexploded ordnance • Corrosion • Europe • Germany • Germany • North Rhine-Westphalia • Nazi Germany • Coordinated Universal Time • Deutsche Welle • Infotainment • Feature story •