09 May 2021

Not treasure


As reported by NBC News:
A Missouri woman was out gardening in her yard last week when she discovered something unexpected in her grapevines — a World War II era Japanese bomb.

Lovett was using the Google Lens tool to try to identify the strange object, which Coffey initially thought was a deep sea diving weight. The online search led them both to realize it was likely a bomb... It was determined that the bomb, even in its old age, was live and still had a 500-ft. blast range. "It wasn't just the shell. This thing was live. They confirmed it," said Coffey.

There is still no reasonable explanation as to how this bomb could have wound up buried on their property...

A tip of the blogging cap to a reader for finding an NPR article about Japanese balloon bombs

4 comments:

  1. Could it be one of the Fu-Go balloon bombs that Japan released across the Pacific towards the end of WWII? Here are some maps of where they were ended up: apparently as far east as Michigan, so this might be one they missed.

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  2. Radiolab did a nice episode about this subject a while ago.
    https://www.wnycstudios.org/podcasts/radiolab/articles/fu-go

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  3. This is some metal you do not want to encounter while "magnet fishing".

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  4. https://www.npr.org/sections/npr-history-dept/2015/01/20/375820191/beware-of-japanese-balloon-bombs Beware Of Japanese Balloon Bombs

    I-)

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