Evaluation of fluxgate magnetometry and electromagnetic induction surveys for subsurface characterization of archaeological features in World War 1 battlefields

2018 ◽  
Vol 34 (2) ◽  
pp. 136-148
Author(s):  
Nicolas Note ◽  
Timothy Saey ◽  
Wouter Gheyle ◽  
Birger Stichelbaut ◽  
Hanne Van den Berghe ◽  
...  
2019 ◽  
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Josh W. Borella ◽  
Peter Almond ◽  
Harry M. Jol

Data in Brief ◽  
2020 ◽  
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pp. 105491 ◽  
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John Kayode ◽  
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Geoderma ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 207-208 ◽  
pp. 310-322 ◽  
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François Jonard ◽  
Mohammad Mahmoudzadeh ◽  
Christian Roisin ◽  
Lutz Weihermüller ◽  
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pp. 225702 ◽  
Author(s):  
Minhua Zhao ◽  
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Sharon E Lowther ◽  
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Y C Jean ◽  
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Author(s):  
Bronwyn Jaques

In recent years, Canadian peacekeeping and UN involvement has assumed a place of high regard, reverence, and veneration, often at the expense of Canada’s military past. While its glorification is in many ways justified, the mythology surrounding Canada’s peacekeeping role has compelled many Canadians to view Canada solely as a peacekeeping nation. As a result, peacekeeping has become the “touchstone of our identity.” This mythology distorts the reality of Canadian military action to the point where Canadian veterans of NATO conflicts are often forgotten and it ignores the fact that many of the first peacekeepers left Canada “virtually unnoticed,” without the recognition and support of their nation. The mythology of peacekeeping misrepresents Canadian military conflicts and ignores that, in spite of the characterization of peacekeepers as nonviolent and unbiased actors, the majority of them were first and foremost Canadian soldiers, many of whom veterans of World War II. For the soldiers who came of age on the battlefields of Europe, the role of peacekeeping was a frustrating and politically charged experience, whereby they held no power and they felt they made very little positive impact. Despite the virtually universal glorification and celebration of peacekeepers in recent years, investigation of the “Cold War Home Front” demonstrates the difficulties faced by Canadian NATO soldiers, U.N. peacekeepers and their families in a society that wanted to move beyond the years of struggle, pain and sacrifice in war time and had little sympathy for the men and women who ‘chose’ to leave their families to serve in wars their nation was not fighting.


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