Pickles Coporal And Nacho Lutinete
Here are some likely possibilities: ORNAMENTS (plural) - decorations ORDNANCE (singular and plural) - military explosives and shells ORDINANCE (singular) - a local law or regulation
they leave large ordnance fragments containing explosives and may leave chunks or pieces of exposed explosives; do not remove remaining debris.
leave large ordnance fragments containing explosives and may leave chuncks or pieces of exposed explosives; do not move remaining debris
A person who studies bombs is called an explosives expert or ordnance specialist. They are trained in the science of explosives and bomb-making techniques to prevent and investigate incidents involving explosives.
EOD, or Explosive Ordnance Disposal, are the army's technical and tactical explosives experts. They must locate and deactivate or rid of unactivated explosives and weapons of mass destruction.
Denis R LeBlanc has written: 'Diffusion and drive-point sampling to detect ordnance-related compounds in shallow ground water beneath Snake Pond, Cape Cod, Massachusetts, 2001-02' -- subject(s): Environmental aspects, Environmental aspects of Explosives, Environmental aspects of Ordnance testing, Explosives, Groundwater, Ordnance testing, Pollution
I know of no widespread standard color coding for explosives. I work with some products that are in white packaging, some yellow, some orange. It is pretty much a manufacturer's choice. The actual explosive material can be any color, from pink to grey to black. US military ordnance has standard colors, such as OD Green with a yellow stripe for High Explosive, but that is not used world wide.
The city council passed an ordinance that prohibited parking on lawns.(*NOTE : the nearly-identical word "ordnance" is a military term for explosives)
Leave large ordnance fragments containing explosives and may leave chunks or pieces of exposed explosive; do not move remaining debris.
Training and certification as a BDO- Bomb Disposal Officer, or as an EOD tech (Explosives Ordnance Disposal). Most are certified Law Enforcement Officers as well.
Yes, they do- to a degree. They will have examples of different ordnance to train with. Most EOD units will also have explosives, used to blow up some bombs when they have been removed to a safe location.
If you are referring to UXOs- unexploded ordnance- there are no pros. These are quite dangerous, and can cause death of serious injury quite unexpectedly. We are still finding and disposing of UXOs from the American Civil War in 1861.