Soldiers take shelter in shell craters to protect themselves from enemy fire and shrapnel during combat. These craters provide a natural form of cover, helping to reduce the risk of injury from explosions and bullets. Additionally, craters can offer a temporary defensive position, allowing soldiers to regroup, plan, or launch counterattacks. Using the terrain effectively enhances their chances of survival in a combat zone.
craters
the hole made by meteors craters
No. Almost all large solid objects in the solar system have craters.
The large indentation on the surface of the moon areÊcalled craters. It is a circular depression in the surface of the moon and other solid body in the solar system.Ê
The craters on moons are simply called craters. They are formed by impact events from asteroids, comets, or meteoroids striking the surface of the moon.
It is mostly in the form of water ice in sheltered parts of craters.
depends on shell, but between 2 to 5 ft
A barren expanse of mud-pockmarked land which she'll craters and filled with barbed wire
Soldiers in WW1 were shell-shocked because of the horrors of war that they saw in which their brains never truly recovered from
In private colonial homes
Because it kills a lot of soldiers.
Because the deep trenches protected them from bullets and shell fragments that were fired at the soldiers and so that the soldiers could be be seen (as targets).
In ww1, soldiers were shot at dawn for suffering from shell shock and for desertion. They shot these soldiers so that other soldiers weren't encouraged to be a coward.
The word is spelt as you have done in the question.
Shell shock.
Shell shocked
trench foot and shell shock