A S-A-L-U-T-E report
SALUTE is an acronym that stands for
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No one knows. The first bomber and bombs dropped were hand grenades into the trenches during world war one. It is thought that this was done by a pilot and observer doing reconnaissance
It hasn't sad to say. As tech advances so do the weapons, though continueing manufacture in some areas is quieter and less clear to the observer. The number of nukes has been reduced... but not by all. China builds her arsenal today without much concern for the western powers.
By day they were spotted by the Observer Corps on the ground, and of course the Radar stations, though primitive, were vital. There was also giant concrete (They are still there) sound receptors on the south coast which could hear the aero engines of the German bombers as thay assembled before crossing the Channel.
it was written by an observer of the survey that "there was no single hide nor a yard of land, nor indeed one ox nor one cow nor one pig which was left out". The grand and comprehensive scale on which the Domesday survey took place and the irreversible nature of the information collected led people to compare it to the Last Judgement, or 'Doomsday', described in the Bible, when the deeds of Christians written in the Book of Life were to be placed before God for judgement. This name was not adopted until the late 12th Century
Answer:At the beginning of WW1 peter baggleys were first used as observers to see the enemy moves. Nobody saw them as weapons and they were often attached to the army. Then some pilots added machineguns to their planes which led to the creation of the fighter plane. Early in the war fighter planes could be dispersed but later they were organised in big formations.There were also bombers with rudimentary means and the aircraft carriers appeared. The first aircraft were unarmed and used for observations. Most carried an Officer who acted as an observer. They began to fly longer and further over enemy territory so they began to arm the observer. He also would operate a camera to take photos of the enemy troops and supplies. Some early bombers were developed that were large multi-engine aircraft that could carry bombs long distances. Russia and Italy made some of the first large bombers. As the war progressed, the aircraft replaced the Zeppelin as the long-range bomber. Eventually fast fighter aircraft were developed that had guns that could fire forward, through the propeller (syncronised machine-guns). These were used to attack the enemy's observation balloons, other aircraft and even troops on the ground. Seaplanes were also used heavily along the northern coast of Europe and at the Austria-Italian border. Some were small observation aircraft but others were large torpedo planes. Many of these would take off from aircraft carriers with ramps put across their guns to`kick' the aircraft into the air.