Geology controls the outcome of battle and no more so than during the trench warfare of the Great War; this new book by expert Peter Doyle takes us through the details. An understanding of terrain has been the mark of a great commander from at least the time of Sun Tzu, and most campaigns can be interpreted and understood from this standpoint. It is the Great War, a war of trenches and dug-outs, of mines and mud, that epitomises the struggles of commander and soldier alike in the prosecution of battle against the obstacles set for them by terrain. This book, based on twenty-five years of study, takes the geology of northern France and Flanders and examines such issues as: What created Flanders mud? How were the Germans able to dig deep dug-outs to resist the British on the Somme? and, Why were the British successful at mine warfare? These and other issues are dealt with in this volume illustrated throughout with maps and photographs.
Disputed Earth: Geology and Trench Warfare on the Western Front 1914–18
Peter Doyle
bookFritz and Tommy : Across the Barbed Wire
Peter Doyle, Robin Schäfer
bookRough Riders: Two Brothers and the Last Stand at Gallipoli
Peter Doyle
bookGrasping Gallipoli : Terrain, Maps and Failure at the Dardanelles, 1915
Peter Chasseaud, Peter Doyle
bookFirst World War Leaders and Commanders: 5 Minute History
Peter Doyle
bookThe First World War in 100 Objects
Peter Doyle
bookRemembering Tommy : The British Soldier in the First World War
Peter Doyle, Chris Foster
bookBattle Story: Loos 1915
Peter Doyle
bookTrench Talk: Words of the First World War
Peter Doyle, Julian Walker
bookGallipoli 1915 : The Fight for the Dardanelles Strait
Peter Doyle
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