The First World War is synonymous with torrential rain, deathly deep mud and bitter cold. It seems no stalemate or major battle was without these added miseries that brought with them disproportionate infection, disease and death.
Now a new scientific study says a once-in-a-lifetime climate anomaly is to blame for the horrendous weather that contributed to hundreds of thousands of battlefield deaths and the 1918 Spanish flu (H1N1) pandemic that cost tens of millions of lives worldwide...
Wounded Scot’s first-person account details fighting, capture at the Somme
New traces of a very old war
The Sinking of U-94
Afghanistan veteran recounts brutal battle
Diver discovers suspected wreckage of Halifax Explosion
The graveyard of empires
Bleeding us dry
Games of war
Disaster aboard HMCS Kootenay
Deadly tech: the rapid advance of First World War weaponry
Stuff of legend: ingredients that make the Victoria Cross
The mystery of the Thames Victoria Cross
James Andrew Watson: WW II bomber pilot sacrifices life to save crew
The juice that fuelled victory in the Battle of Britain
The fighting Robertson brothers of Campbellton, N.B.
Estate auction chronicles the colourful life of war correspondent Bill Boss
Non-combatants accounted for the bulk of Second World War deaths
German Red Cross to continue tracking WW II disappearances
The “Miracle of Dunkirk” came at high cost
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