A 155-millimeter artillery shell detonated prematurely over Interstate 5 during a Marine Corps live-fire demonstration at Camp Pendleton. Israeli prime minister orders ‘immediate, powerful’ military ...
The ship-mounted guns are remarkably well-advanced for the era. The recovery by marine archaeologists of medieval artillery from the wreck of former royal Danish-Norwegian flagship Gribshunden, which ...
SUMY, Ukraine—In the winter, a Ukrainian commander saw 12 Russian soldiers moving across a field, leaving him with a choice of how to respond: drones or artillery? He chose artillery, which wiped out ...
It’s hard to beat the beauty of hardwood floors. The texture and color of real wood add warmth and character to your home like no synthetic material can. Your hardwood floors, however, are only as ...
ROCK ISLAND ARSENAL, Ill. — Since 2022, the Army has nearly quadrupled its monthly production of the 155mm M795 projectile artillery and is driven by efforts to improve readiness, respond to global ...
Tennessee Army National Guard soldiers conduct a training exercise using the M142 High Mobility Artillery Rocket System. (Sgt. Grayson Cavaliere/U.S. Army) Soldiers with the 25th Infantry Division are ...
The future of artillery is a system that can do both offense and defense, the head of U.S. Army Europe and Africa said Wednesday—and the service believes it’s finally at a place to make that happen.
(left to right) Qiuyue Nie, the paper’s first author and postdoctoral fellow in the department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering at the University of Pennsylvania’s School of Engineering and ...
A potentially deadly fungus known as "pharaoh's curse fungus" could offer an unexpected path to fighting cancer, recent research shows. Scientists from the University of Pennsylvania modified ...
(NewsNation) — Researchers at the University of Pennsylvania have turned a deadly fungus into a potent cancer-fighting compound after isolating a new class of molecules from it. Aspergillus flavus is ...
The "pharaoh's curse" fungus, Aspergillus flavus, can be used to fight leukemia, according to a study published in the journal Nature Chemical Biology. The fungus is called "pharaoh's curse" because ...