1. [Death by explosion of an aerial mine].
- Author
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Stockhausen S, Wöllner K, Madea B, and Doberentz E
- Subjects
- Explosions, Fatal Outcome, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Occupational Exposure, Autopsy methods, Blast Injuries pathology, Burns diagnosis, Multiple Trauma pathology, Weapons
- Abstract
Civilians are rarely killed by military weapons except in times of war. In early 2014, a 50-year-old man died in an explosion of an aerial mine from the Second World War when he was crushing concrete chunks with an excavator at a recycling plant. In the burned operator's cab, the remains of a body were found on the driver's seat. The thorax and the head were missing. Still sticking in the shoe, the right foot severed at the ankle was found about 7 m from the excavator together with numerous small to tiny body parts. At autopsy, the completely disrupted, strongly charred lower torso of a male connected to the left extremities as well as a large number of small tissue fragments and calcined bones were found. According to calculations performed by the seismographical station on the basis of seismic data, only about 45-60 percent of the charge had detonated. The autopsy results illustrate all the more the massive impact of such an explosion.
- Published
- 2014