Posted on 01/20/2015 2:27:36 PM PST by Theoria
Interesting name Bly ... we have a Blyn near where I live.
Did one of those back in 88.....same render safe procedure....BIP it .....blow in place. 1.25lb M112 block of C4 dual primed. 10 minute stroll back to cover and then oooooh beer thirty back home.
Thank you for the ping.
Moore can kiss ole spot on his brown nose...
The map on a previous post is wrong in that it confuses Lakeview OR with Lakewood WA. Of course Lakeview is in the central part of Oregon near the southern border.
I really don’t know how accurate that map is either ...just saw it and the story and I remembered something about my history class regarding those balloons ....
Thanks for the ping. C4 was the right way to dispose of it.
Bombs are dug up around Tokyo all the time. A few years back a big 500lb bomb was dug up just next to the train tracks near my house. There is always so much construction in Japan that they are found with some frequency, but we only hear about the really interesting ones.
probably not as much lately with their economy
Japanese wartime explosives commonly used an explosive filler called picric acid. It doesn’t age well to begin with, but when it ages in contact with iron (like a bomb casing) it forms amalgams that are extremely unstable and dangerous.
Looking out my office window I see a forest of tower cranes putting up new 30-story building from one side of the city to the other. The economy may not be great, but its generally not too bad for those that have the cash to invest in new real estate. Its always artificially stable here anyway.
I wonder if the Canadians bothered to contact the Japanese to see if they had any desire to repatriate their wandering warrior.
So. Did it, or did it not, produce excess yield beyond what could be explained by the known amount of C4? Was it the real deal? Or was it not?
Unless they have an answer to that, those Canuck cops are just flat-footed, negative archaeologists. Inquiring minds want to know.
One of them landed in Omaha, NE. There is a plaque on the wall of a building there commemorating it. It is in the Dundee area of town.
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