Unexploded ordnance world war Stock Photos and Images
RMAHRM2M–Unexploded Japanese WWII Ammunition Ordnance War Relic Ruins Peleliu Palau
RMDGHDY3–Iron Harvest' World War One unexploded grenades recently recovered from fields Somme Battlefield Somme Picardy France May
RMM2WE3J–ADEDE Search & Recovery team searching for German WWII mines and unexploded ordnance on beach between Wenduine and De Haan, West Flanders, Belgium
RMD590DG–The 'Iron Harvest' is the gathering of unexploded ordnance from World War One, which is still found on the battlefields
RMFA26BE–An unexploded shell from World War 2
RMK3KA66–Dangerous work! A bomb disposal officer digging an unexploded German bomb in London 1943 Explosive Ordnance Disposal
RMM3PXRW–A Metropolitan Police officer close to London City Airport which has been closed after the discovery of an unexploded Second World War bomb.
RMHMHEBJ–Army bomb disposal team dealing with some unexploded World War Two ordnance found at Kingley Vale Nature Reserve, near Chichester, West Sussex
RFR06W17–Unexploded Ordnance (UXO) in Laos after the Vietnam War
RF2WF1PPW–Unexploded WW2 bomb overgrown with vines. Pacific war 1944 Palau Islands, Micronesia,
RME6MXXC–Unexploded World War Two bomb at Kelham Island Industrial Museum,Sheffield, UK
RF2RPR92M–Unexploded First World War shells stacked for collection from French farm in the Somme region
RFR0TBGR–German 'egg' grenade unearthed by spring ploughing, Courcelette, France
RMEF79CN–The trenches on battlefield of Vimy world war one France
RM2C3YN4M–Keep Clear Unexploded Bomb sign
RM2RYDTR3–Royal Navy Bomb Disposal Squad with unexploded bombs during the Second World War.
RM2AA2G2D–unexploded ordnance, Ukraine war, Russian air attack
RMMHBRE8–Vauquois Hill, grenades in the area, unexploded ordnance, First World War, near Verdun, Vauquois, Grand Est, France
RMDNGWKR–Warning notice sign Danger Unexploded ordnance on this beach it may explode and kill you Ministry of Defence
RMAHRM0W–Unexploded Japanese WWII Ammunition Ordnance War Relic Ruins Peleliu Palau
RMEE1EJK–'Iron Harvest', World War One high explosive shell, unexploded, dug up during tree extraction, Verdun Battlefield, Verdun, Meuse Department, Lorraine, France, July
RMM2WE48–ADEDE Search & Recovery team searching for German WWII mines and unexploded ordnance on beach between Wenduine and De Haan, West Flanders, Belgium
RFA0CT91–The deadly combination of a bombie and the hoe damaged when it struck a live bombie and killed a farmer in northern Laos
RMJG5JKE–Dud unexploded bomb, Menin Road, 1917
RMK3KA90–Dangerous work! A bomb disposal officer digging an unexploded German bomb in London 1943
RMM3PY7R–A response vehicle is parked close to London City Airport which has been closed after the discovery of an unexploded Second World War bomb.
RMHMHEBR–Army bomb disposal team dealing with some unexploded World War Two ordnance found at Kingley Vale Nature Reserve, near Chichester, West Sussex
RFR06W18–Unexploded Ordnance (UXO) in Laos after the Vietnam War
RMFJJ33A–Army bomb disposal experts recovering Second World War bombs in Welington 1960s
RMM1MKMC–AJAXNETPHOTO. 2011. PICARDY, FRANCE - TRACTOR RAKING THE BROWN EARTH. PHOTO:JONATHAN EASTLAND/AJAX REF:D112104 1112
RF2RPR932–Unexploded First World War shells stacked for collection from French farm in the Somme region
RMFY6W09–AJAXNETPHOTO. CHUIGNES, SOMME, FRANCE. - IRON HARVEST - SOME OF THE HUNDREDS OF TONS OF LETHAL FIRST WORLD WAR MUNITIONS RECOVERED FROM FARMERS FIELDS IN FRANCE AND BELGIUM EACH YEAR. PICTURED; UNEXPLODED SHELLS IN A FARM SHED. PHOTO:JONATHAN EASTLAND/AJAX REF:D111903 1026
RM2FWRDD2–Members of the Royal Air Force bomb disposal unit dealing with Second World War ordnance, having extracted it from a river. 1950s/60s
RMDHR8N5–Unexploded ordnance at Vimy ridge
RM2M613GE–Brighton UK 1st January 2023 - Police evacuate a part of Brighton beach to the east of Brighton Palace Pier after a WW2 shell was discovered washed up . Members of the Royal Navy Bomb Disposal team exploded the device in the mid afternoon : Credit Simon Dack / Alamy Live News
RM2AA2GC1–unexploded ordnance, Ukraine war, Russian air attack
RME4C3XP–A warning sign of unexploded ordnance near the the Canadian National Vimy Memorial
RMDNGWKF–Warning notice sign Danger Unexploded ordnance on this beach it may explode and kill you Ministry of Defence
RM2BW1NJ2–Leipzig, Germany. 29th May, 2020. The site of a suspected unexploded ordnance from the 2nd World War. A few days ago a suspicious object was discovered here during construction work. It was not an aircraft bomb, but an old well. Early this morning, specialists had started to excavate the suspicious object at a depth of 4 meters. If a bomb had been found, parts of Leipzig's city centre and an estimated 18,000 people would have had to be evacuated. Credit: Jan Woitas/dpa-Zentralbild/dpa/Alamy Live News
RMDGHDYT–'Iron Harvest', World War One high explosive shell, unexploded, Somme Battlefield, Somme, Picardy, France, May
RMM2WE3T–ADEDE Search & Recovery team searching for German WWII mines and unexploded ordnance on beach between Wenduine and De Haan, West Flanders, Belgium
RMEDA1JY–The Canadian National Vimy Ridge Memorial in France
RMD5N72F–A warning sign (of unexploded World War One ordnance) at the Newfoundland Memorial Park, Somme, France.
RMM3PM13–London, UK, 12th February 2018 Royal Navy Bomb Squad attending to World War II unexploded bomb incident at London City Airport in London’s Royal Docks Credit: A Christy/Alamy Live News.
RMM3R28W–Royal Navy bomb disposal divers close to London City Airport which has been closed after the discovery of an unexploded Second World War bomb.
RMHMHEC3–Army bomb disposal team dealing with some unexploded World War Two ordnance found at Kingley Vale Nature Reserve, near Chichester, West Sussex
RFR06W1A–Unexploded Ordnance (UXO) in Laos after the Vietnam War
RMHFBA5X–150525-N-RA981-223 BALTIC SEA (May 25, 2015) Members of a Latvian explosive ordnance disposal team use demolition charges to detonate a World War II-era German bottom-mine while conducting mine countermeasures operations in the Baltic Sea off the coast of Estonia during Exercise Open Spirit 2015. EODMU-8 is working in conjunction with explosive ordnance disposal teams from Estonia, Germany, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland and Sweden to dispose of unexploded ordnance originating from World War II. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Patrick A. Ratcliff/Released) Explosion of
RME71639–Ypres-Ieper WW1 Battlefield, 1914-1918, Belgium. Unexploded WW1 Shells at Two Mine Craters, Kruisstraat, Flanders, Belgium. Febr
RMEAACE7–Scots pines grow among unexploded ordinance on Vimy Ridge, France
RM2AMC68B–Soviet 82mm mortar bombs O-832 from World War II found in the forests of the Eastern Carpathians in Slovakia
RM2FWRDD0–Members of the Royal Air Force bomb disposal unit dealing with Second World War ordnance, having extracted it from a river. 1950s/60s
RF2WA1R1F–Unexploded ordnance, explosive remnants of war, non exploded ammonition left behind after the both world war in Belgium and France. | Munitions, obus
RM2M613GT–Brighton UK 1st January 2023 - Police evacuate a part of Brighton beach to the east of Brighton Palace Pier after a WW2 shell was discovered washed up . Members of the Royal Navy Bomb Disposal team exploded the device in the mid afternoon : Credit Simon Dack / Alamy Live News
RM2AA2GPN–unexploded ordnance, Ukraine war, Russian air attack
RFFEYPG4–Old World War Trenches In Forest Since Second World War In Belarus
RFD98T5W–Unexploded shells at the roadside France
RM2BW1NHX–Leipzig, Germany. 29th May, 2020. Containers were used to secure the site of a suspected unexploded ordnance from the 2nd World War. A few days ago a suspicious object was discovered here during construction work. But it was not an aerial bomb, but an old well. Early this morning, specialists had begun to excavate the suspicious object at a depth of four meters. If a bomb had been found, parts of Leipzig's city centre and an estimated 18,000 people would have had to be evacuated. Credit: Jan Woitas/dpa-Zentralbild/dpa/Alamy Live News
RMDGHE05–Iron Harvest' World War One shrapnel shell unexploded with shrapnel balls still inside Somme Battlefield Somme Picardy France
RMM2WE43–ADEDE Search & Recovery team searching for German WWII mines and unexploded ordnance on beach between Wenduine and De Haan, West Flanders, Belgium
RMEDATPF–The trenches and craters on battlefield of Vimy ridge
RF2C12TTD–Caution sign at Fort Miles, in Cape Henlopen, DE, advises the public to beware of unexploded World War 2 munitions in the area.
RMM3PM11–London, UK, 12th February 2018 Royal Navy Bomb Squad attending to World War II unexploded bomb incident at London City Airport in London’s Royal Docks Credit: A Christy/Alamy Live News.
RMM3R044–A Royal Navy bomb disposal van at London City Airport which has been closed after the discovery of an unexploded Second World War bomb.
RMHMHEB2–Army bomb disposal team dealing with some unexploded World War Two ordnance found at Kingley Vale Nature Reserve, near Chichester, West Sussex
RF2ATJM4T–Vimy Ridge Memorial, France
RMHEPRGY–U.S. Army Staff Sgt. Kenneth Dollar, assigned to the 666th Ordnance Company (EOD), 441st Ordnance Battalion (EOD), Alabama National Guard, approaches simulated unexploded ordnance during a scenario for the 111th Ordnance Group (EOD) Team of the Year 2016 competition at the Wendell H. Ford Regional Training Center, Greenville, Ky., April 26, 2016. The weeklong competition tests teams in various scenarios they may encounter in situations around the world, to determine the most physically, mentally, tactically, and technically fit team to represent their command in future competition. (U.S. Army
RM2RC4XEM–The image shows a panoramic view of a section of Hill 304 in Meuse, France, during World War One. The ground is heavily damaged from previous battles. Men from the Reclamation and Demolition office are seen salvaging ammunition and exploding unexploded ordnance.
RMEG2CRK–Airman 1st Class Jessie Ralls surveys the area around unexploded ordnance from atop an armored vehicle during a Phase II Exercise June 18, 2013, at Royal Air Force Lakenheath, England. The exercise tested Airmen on their skills and readiness to ensure they are prepared for real-world events. Ralls is a 48th Civil Engineer Squadron explosive ordnance disposal apprentice. Airman 1st Class Dana J. Butler
RM2AMC6B8–Soviet 82mm mortar bombs O-832 from World War II found in the forests of the Eastern Carpathians in Slovakia
RM2FWRDD4–Members of the Royal Air Force bomb disposal unit dealing with Second World War ordnance, having extracted it from a river. 1950s/60s
RF2WA1R11–Unexploded ordnance, explosive remnants of war, non exploded ammonition left behind after the both world war in Belgium and France. | Munitions, obus
RM2M613G6–Brighton UK 1st January 2023 - Police evacuate a part of Brighton beach to the east of Brighton Palace Pier after a WW2 shell was discovered washed up . Members of the Royal Navy Bomb Disposal team exploded the device in the mid afternoon : Credit Simon Dack / Alamy Live News
RM2R7GB69–The image is of a 8inch Howitzer artillery shell at the road junction to the British Point 110 new and old military cemetery
RFFEYP52–Old World War Trenches In Forest Since Second World War In Belarus
RM2G4399C–Cartridge casings from unexploded ordnance that fell on Laos during the 2nd Indochina War in the 1970s are exhibited in front of the UXO Laos Informat
RM2BW1NJN–Leipzig, Germany. 29th May, 2020. Containers were used to secure the site of a suspected unexploded ordnance from the 2nd World War. A few days ago a suspicious object was discovered here during construction work. But it was not an aerial bomb, but an old well. Early this morning, specialists had begun to excavate the suspicious object at a depth of four meters. If a bomb had been found, parts of Leipzig's city centre and an estimated 18,000 people would have had to be evacuated. Credit: Jan Woitas/dpa-Zentralbild/dpa/Alamy Live News
RFDYNGXT–Sunlight on the craters and regrown woods on the World War 1 battleground, Vimy Ridge, France
RMM2WE47–ADEDE Search & Recovery team searching for German WWII mines and unexploded ordnance on beach between Wenduine and De Haan, West Flanders, Belgium
RMEDAH6F–The Canadian National Vimy Ridge Memorial in France
RMDXHH32–WWI poster warning civilians for danger of collecting World War One unexploded ordnance like bombs, shells, grenades in Belgium
RMM3PM12–London, UK, 12th February 2018 Royal Navy Bomb Squad attending to World War II unexploded bomb incident at London City Airport in London’s Royal Docks Credit: A Christy/Alamy Live News.
RMM3PYWA–Planes on the apron at London City Airport which has been closed after the discovery of an unexploded Second World War bomb.
RMHMHEB4–Army bomb disposal team dealing with some unexploded World War Two ordnance found at Kingley Vale Nature Reserve, near Chichester, West Sussex
RMG43F72–Corporal Gordon Townley at the bottom of a deep excavation probing for a German bomb near the Tate Gallery, London.
RM2AMBDA4–Dortmund, Germany. 12th Jan, 2020. Bomb disposal expert Karl-Friedrich Schröder (l) and his team show the detonator of a defused bomb. The two bombs found from the Second World War have been defused. No unexploded ordnance had been detected at two other suspected sites. The aircraft bombs were located in a densely populated residential area. As a result, some 14 000 people had to leave their homes. Credit: Bernd Thissen/dpa/Alamy Live News
RMG43F70–Men of No.2 Bomb Disposal Unit hauling a 2,500 German bomb from out of the ground under a partly-demolished building off Tottenham Court Road.
RMHF3Y3D–U.S. Army Staff Sgt. Kenneth Dollar, assigned to the 666th Ordnance Company (EOD), 441st Ordnance Battalion (EOD), Alabama National Guard, approaches simulated unexploded ordnance during a scenario for the 111th Ordnance Group (EOD) Team of the Year 2016 competition at the Wendell H. Ford Regional Training Center, Greenville, Ky., April 26, 2016. The weeklong competition tests teams in various scenarios they may encounter in situations around the world, to determine the most physically, mentally, tactically, and technically fit team to represent their command in future competition. (U.S. Army
RMG43F7C–Two Royal Air Force men from RAF Debden, Essex, take a close look at a 1,000-pound bomb unearthed at Southall Lane, Heston and Isleworth, Middlesex by men working on excavations in connection with the extension of the M4 motorway.
RM2AMC68P–Soviet 82mm mortar bombs O-832 from World War II found in the forests of the Eastern Carpathians in Slovakia
RMM3R0DF–Planes on the apron at London City Airport which has been closed after the discovery of an unexploded Second World War bomb.
RM2M613G1–Brighton UK 1st January 2023 - Police evacuate a part of Brighton beach to the east of Brighton Palace Pier after a WW2 shell was discovered washed up . Members of the Royal Navy Bomb Disposal team exploded the device in the mid afternoon : Credit Simon Dack / Alamy Live News
RF2WA1R1C–Unexploded ordnance, explosive remnants of war, non exploded ammonition left behind after the both world war in Belgium and France. | Munitions, obus
RFFEYP65–Old World War Trenches In Forest Since Second World War In Belarus
RM2RC5JXD–Caption: Image depicts a panoramic view of a section of Hill No. 304, located in Esnes, Meuse, France. The ground, heavily damaged by shelling, served as a significant site for numerous battles during World War I. Servicemen from the Reclamation and Demolition office can be seen in the image collecting salvageable ammunition and disposing of unexploded ordnance. (Date recorded: March 12, 1919. Image reference: 111-SC-42863)
RFENB685–Old World War Trenches In Forest Since Second World War In Belarus
RM2GKH21R–The T.A. Gillespie Company Shell Loading Plant Explosion Memorial at Parlin, N.J., April 20, 2021. The memorial, which is located at the Ernst Memorial Cemetery on 328 Ernston Road, honors the more than 100 people who were killed Oct. 4, 1918, at a World War I munitions plant in Sayreville, N.J. The facility and more than 300 surrounding buildings were destroyed. The first explosion caused a fire with ensuing explosions continuing for three days. Unexploded ordnance has been found as recently as 2007.
RFHH13TX–Old World War Trenches In Forest Since Second World War In Belarus
RMEDATP9–The Canadian National Vimy Ridge Memorial in France
RMHEP019–A Soldier with 3rd Ordnance Battalion Explosive Ordnance Disposal, 71st Ord. Group EOD, Joint Base Lewis-McChord, Wash., examines unexploded ordnance during a certification exercise Nov. 18 on JBLM. The exercise was designed to mimic real world scenarios and test EOD personnel on their capabilities. (U.S. Army photo by Sgt. Cody Quinn, 28th Public Affairs Detachment/Released) JBLM EOD trains for real world scenarios 141118-A-BX700-198
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