The Fat Man did more Damage than the Little Boy
Well I know that in the Pearl Harbor bombing, 2,403 men were killed and more than 2,400 were wounded.
It was difficult to determine the cost of the damages from the atom bomb dropped on Hiroshima because on September 17, 1945, Hiroshima was struck by the Makurazaki Typhoon which further damaged Hiroshima soon after the atom bomb damaged the city. The typhoon was estimated to do more monetary damage than the bomb to the physical part of the city.
Only the damage and casualties.
Germany was bombing England in WW2. This was done to demoralize the English and to destroy manufacturing and shipping centers...basically to cause infrastructure damage.
According to the Japanese Ministry of Internal Affairs and Communications, the population in Japan in October 1940 was estimated to be 73,114,308; in November 1945 the population was estimated at 71,998,104. Japan was visibly a thriving country that was hit very hard by the bombing.
I don't exactly know but I know it can take out an entire city out!
It was not affected by the nuclear attacks but it was put through saturation bombing of the city in 1945 before the attacks.
More Than 3,000 PEOLE
No, "bombing" is not a preposition. It is a verb form or a noun referring to the act of detonating explosives. Prepositions are words that show the relationship between a noun or pronoun and other words in a sentence.
Saturation bombing inflicted maximum damage. Strategic bombing focused on key targets.
Saturation bombing inflicted maximum damage. Strategic bombing focused on key targets.
Saturation bombing inflicted maximum damage. Strategic bombing focused on key targets.
Saturation bombing inflicted maximum damage. Strategic bombing focused on key targets.
Saturation bombing inflicted maximum damage. Strategic bombing focused on key targets.
Saturation bombing inflicted maximum damage. Strategic bombing focused on key targets.
Saturation bombing inflicted maximum damage. Strategic bombing focused on key targets.
about 140,000 people.
It was difficult to determine the cost of the damages from the atom bomb dropped on Hiroshima because on September 17, 1945, Hiroshima was struck by the Makurazaki Typhoon which further damaged Hiroshima soon after the atom bomb damaged the city. The typhoon was estimated to do more monetary damage than the bomb to the physical part of the city.