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a collective term for shot, fragments, or debris thrown out by an exploding shell or landmine
An artillery shell filled with steel balls, pellets and powder, designed to explode in the air, releasing pellets over enemy targets
Frequently called spherical-case shot, this was an iron shell containing a number of canister-sized balls with a black-powder bursting charge and a powder-train time fuze It was fired and exploded in the same manner as a conventional shell but when detonated scattered its small shot as well as the iron fragments of the shell itself This ammunition was used by the British as early as 1808, but was not given its inventor's name until the 1850s Shrapnel rounds were used in modern steel breechloading artillery well into the 20th century
A collective term for fragments and debris thrown out by an exploding shell or landmine
shell splinters; also, shell timed to explode over, and shower bullets and splinters on, personnel
Shrapnel consists of small pieces of metal which are scattered from exploding bombs and shells. He was hit by shrapnel from a grenade. small pieces of metal from a bomb, bullet etc that are scattered when it explodes (Henry Shrapnel (1761-1842), British army officer who invented such bombs). Originally, a type of projectile invented by the British artillery officer Henry Shrapnel (1761-1842), containing small spherical bullets and an explosive charge to scatter the shot and fragments of the shell casing. A time fuse set off the explosive charge late in the shell's flight, when it was near opposing troops. The resulting hail of high-velocity debris was often lethal; it caused most of the artillery-inflicted wounds in World War I. In World War II a high-explosive bursting charge that fragmented the shell's iron casing made shrapnel balls unnecessary; the term shrapnel came to be used for the shell-casing fragments