The increased use of a chemical compound to replace TNT in explosive devices has a damaging and long lasting effect on plants ...
The increased use of a chemical compound to replace TNT in explosive devices has a damaging and long lasting effect on plants, new research has shown. The increased use of a chemical compound to ...
The US hasn't produced TNT on American soil in decades, but a new contract issued by the military is going to change that.
The device would have had a yield approximately double that of the combined explosive power of all nuclear weapons in ...
The increased use of a chemical compound to replace TNT in explosive devices has a damaging and long lasting effect on plants, new research has shown. In recent years, TNT has started to be ...
A new study published in Nature Plants, conducted by Professor Neil Bruce of the University of York’s Department of Biology ...
The US Army plans to build a domestic production facility for the explosive compound, which the Pentagon has long been forced to obtain from overseas. TNT, short for trinitrotoluene, is a widely ...
Researchers have found that DNAN, used as a TNT replacement in explosives, is toxic to plants and accumulates throughout ...
The Russian version, called the Father Of All Bombs, weighs just 15,560lbs and is packed with the equivalent to 44 tons of explosive TNT. This is four times more than the US' model which ...