This is from a post I made a couple of months ago regarding injuries sustained by unspent cartridges in a fire.
While assigned as a CID Agent at MCB Camp Lejeune, NC in the early 1980s, I had a case where two Marines were injured at a training range in the Verona Loop area of the base. A brush fire started at one of the ranges and junior troops were ordered to extinguish the fire as best as they could. About all they had to fight the fire with was a few shovels and most were just flailing the ground with shelter halves. I received a call that two of those Marines were injured and had been transported to the Naval Hospital with wounds. The MPs referred the incident to our office since it was reported that the injured had suffered bullet wounds from unspent cartridges in the fire. Upon arrival, it was determined that projectiles from unspent cartridges had wounded the two Marines, one received a 5.56 round just above the wrist, lodged between the ulnar and radius, the other Marine had a round lodged against a rib on his flank. ER Doc stated that if the rib hadn't stopped the round, it would have more than likely caused internal damage to liver, kidney, etc. I went out to the range where the incident occurred and found quite a few unfired cartridges that had detonated in the brush fire. Since military primers are crimped in the pocket, they are less likely to blow and all the pressure exits the mouth of the case. Here is a photo of one that was recovered from the range.
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Very interesting. Thanks for the post.
SO — we all know now that that stuff about bullets tossed in a campfire and popping off harmlessly is NOT necessarily accurate. Depending upon the ammunition, of course.
CAUTION is the order of the day, as are all things firearms related.
And just MAYBE — my earlier posting with the quote from the official history of the Second N.H. Regiment — might be accurate also?