The Sand Bag Wall, which was put up in defense of this, prevented bullets from striking a soldier's chest when he is on the trench board (also known as fire step). Soldiers were able to fire at the enemy, while being protected.
A parapet was the front of the front line trench, The top 2-3 feet of the trench consisted of sand bags to absorb bullets and shell fragments. It was in effect a vertical extension of the trench, used to provide cover for the soldiers.
In order to protect themselves from enemy fire, soldiers on both sides "dug in." They first built shallow slit trenches and rifle pits, and then as the once mobile lines of war became deadlocked, the trenches became deeper and more complex. Basically, a trench protected a soldier from flying bullets and shells.
During World War I, yet true for any military conflict involved trenches, soldiers survived the trench-warfare conditions through a variety of means. Above all, they kept their heads down; that is, they made use of their below-ground position to avoid enemy bullets.
Yes and No. Yes in the sense that they protected soldiers safer form shells and bullets. No in the sense that they created a bloody stalemate and lengthened WWI by several years, costing millions of lives.
* Trench fighting did a lot of things. At night the soldiers could cut the opponents barbed wire and plan surprise attacks on those in the trench. * They slept in the trench. ==
The Sand Bag Wall, which was put up in defense of this, prevented bullets from striking a soldier's chest when he is on the trench board (also known as fire step). Soldiers were able to fire at the enemy, while being protected.
The Trench warfare was a common tactics during and before world war 1. It gave soldiers a very good cover from bullets, artillery, mortars. It was also cheap and simple
A parapet was the front of the front line trench, The top 2-3 feet of the trench consisted of sand bags to absorb bullets and shell fragments. It was in effect a vertical extension of the trench, used to provide cover for the soldiers.
In order to protect themselves from enemy fire, soldiers on both sides "dug in." They first built shallow slit trenches and rifle pits, and then as the once mobile lines of war became deadlocked, the trenches became deeper and more complex. Basically, a trench protected a soldier from flying bullets and shells.
During World War I, yet true for any military conflict involved trenches, soldiers survived the trench-warfare conditions through a variety of means. Above all, they kept their heads down; that is, they made use of their below-ground position to avoid enemy bullets.
An advantage of a trench is that it was a line of security. Soldiers that were in trenches were able to see enemy soldiers and surprise them by force.
Yes and No. Yes in the sense that they protected soldiers safer form shells and bullets. No in the sense that they created a bloody stalemate and lengthened WWI by several years, costing millions of lives.
#1 poison gas, trench feet
A hole in the wall of a trench soldiers sleep in them.
The trench system was the place where the soldiers live and work
The remedy for severe trench foot would be amputation or staying out of the water
a trench