no mans land =|
I did a report on the Battle of Caporetto and I found nothing on if they fought in trenches or open fields.
in trenches
Some fast food restaurants that are known to stay open late in the area include McDonald's, Taco Bell, and Wendy's.
Conditions were unsanitary, due to the open toilet trenches
They open onto the paradiso, the area in front of the cathedral
In the same trench, they'd probably just yell down the line or walk. If they were in different trenches, they'd send a runner, someone with a track or some sort of running background to pretty much dodge bullets to get the message to the other trench.
In the early parts of WW1 battles were fought as they always had been, open area, artillary, and military formations; Trech warfare was a grace in the later months as it gave cover to soldiers and allowed for stand stills (ties) in battles. later in the war chemical warfare was incorperated, however it was quickly dispatched with as it violated the "rules" of war. but MOST battles were fought using trenches (thin crevaces dug by soldiers and used for cover) and usually no one moved from their trenches unless to charge directly across the "no mans land" (the area between trenches, named this because no very few made it across this stretch.) and into the enemy trench.
The minimum distance is the depth of the excavation...
space
Yes, there is a restaurant open after midnight in this area.
Open the the elements, cold, partially filled with water when it was raining/snowing with rats included to the mix. The soldiers, as best I understand did what they had to do to cope. I have read reports of often waking to find a rat on them or nearby. It was a choice between rats and being wet or being in the open to the gunfire.
strip mining Also known as open-cast mining (UK).