to party and go wild yea buddy
Not effectively.
it was used to blow up enemy submarines and carry drugs into space
yes, and mines at sea
World's first clash of aircraft carriers.
Dunkirk
Italy wanted land in the Adriatic Sea after World War 1 in order to expand its reach. They wanted to gain Trentino, Istria, Venezia Giulia, and South Tyrol.
Both sides - the Allies (Britain, USA, Australia, New Zealand, India, etc) and the Axis (Germany, Italy, Japan). They were used on land at at sea. Mines are laid and recovered at sea by warships called mine sweepers.
it was used to blow up enemy submarines and carry drugs into space
yes, and mines at sea
Yes
Cowries
Land, sea and air were the arenas used.
Naval Mines
Nuclear, plane, land, and sea bombs.
Poland's access to the Baltic Sea between world war 1 and world war 2. Near the towns of Gdansk and Gdynia.
Assuming you mean MINE in the sense of an explosive weapon, and not removing a mineral from the earth- There were two major types of mines- Naval and Land. Naval mines were floated at sea, anchored to hold them in place, and exploded with brushed by a ship. By WW II, the fuse had changed to a magnetic fuse that would explode when a steel hulled ship passed close to it. Land mines have been used in war since the 1200s, and were used by most WW I combatants. They might be used to protect a flank from infiltrators, or to channel attackers into a fire zone. The used a fuse that exploded the mine when you stepped on it. The introduction of tanks also brought larger anti-tank mines, intended to break the track of a tank, immobilizing it. Some land mines were filled with chemical warfare agents, such as mustard gas. Detonation produced a cloud of highly toxic gas.
Yes, weapons were used at sea in WW II. Projectile inertia and explosives. Static explosives were the main ones.
Transporting war material across the sea; convoys.