2.5-meter by 70-centimeter device was found by bricklayers on private property near the Exeter university campus. Firemen working in the area to deactivate the explosive device
Hundreds of students from the University of Exeter, in the southwest of England, have been evacuated from their residences after the discovery of a bomb, still unexploded, from the Second World War, police-reported this Saturday.
Twelve Exeter student residences and a hundred other nearby properties were evacuated Friday night.
- Brief Anger Hampers Blood Vessel Function Leading to Increased Risk of Heart Disease and Stroke – New Study
- New Blood Test Pinpoints Future Stroke Risk – Study Identifies Inflammatory Molecules as Key Biomarker
- Enceladus: A Potential Haven for Extraterrestrial Life in its Hidden Ocean Depths
- New Experiment: Dark Matter Is Not As ‘DARK’ As All We Think
- Scientists in Fear of This New Predator From Red Sea Eating Native Species in Mediterranean
The police surrounded the area around the explosive device, measuring 2.5 meters by 70 centimeters, in order for it to be inspected this Saturday by British bombers.
UPDATE: Major incident, Exeter – More than 2,000 homes are being evacuated this morning in preparation for the detonation of a suspected WW2 bomb by the Army, discovered at a building site on Glenthorne Road yesterday https://t.co/WyEitf9bis pic.twitter.com/dKaRf3BM3I
— Devon & Cornwall Police (@DC_Police) February 27, 2021
Residents within the cordon were asked to leave their property and stay out of the area while experts perform work to ensure the device is safe.
Police authorities reported that they expect the work to be completed by the end of Saturday. A spokesman for the Devon and Cornwall Police asked the population not to approach the scene.
If you are in private accommodation in the city and you have been asked to relocate, please follow the instructions you will have been given by local authorities.
— University of Exeter (@UniofExeter) February 27, 2021
If you were planning to return this weekend to accommodation in any of the affected buildings, please do not do so.
Work will continue today relating to the device which was found yesterday on private land at Glenthorne Road to the west of campus.From 9.00am this morning an expanded cordon will be in place. This is an additional measure to allow the authorities to undertake the necessary work
— University of Exeter (@UniofExeter) February 27, 2021
The bomb was reported at 9.20am on Friday and the University of Exeter evacuated 12 residences along with several other buildings on its Streatham campus.
In a tweet, the university noted that the device was found by bricklayers working on private property near the university campus and the students have been temporarily housed in hotels in the city.
Recently, more than 8,000 inhabitants of the city of Gottingen, in central Germany, were evacuated so that experts could defuse four suspected bombs found from World War II.
The experts found four ten-ton bombs belonging to the United States Army and decided to carry out a controlled detonation.
In Germany, the discovery of bombs from World War II is still common. In fact, in June 2010, three members of a bomb disposal team were killed and six people were injured when a World War II bomb exploded in Göttingen during attempts to defuse the device.
- Brief Anger Hampers Blood Vessel Function Leading to Increased Risk of Heart Disease and Stroke – New Study
- New Blood Test Pinpoints Future Stroke Risk – Study Identifies Inflammatory Molecules as Key Biomarker
- Enceladus: A Potential Haven for Extraterrestrial Life in its Hidden Ocean Depths
- New Experiment: Dark Matter Is Not As ‘DARK’ As All We Think
- Scientists in Fear of This New Predator From Red Sea Eating Native Species in Mediterranean
While in Italy, bomb squads last January successfully defused a World War II bomb whose discovery forced the evacuation of thousands of people in the Italian city of Bolzano, in the north of the country.
The deactivation operations lasted approximately two hours, during which nearly 4,500 residents in the affected area were evacuated.
The bomb had been dropped by a US aircraft and weighed 200 kilos. It was found during construction work near the city’s train station.
Meanwhile, in Poland, a British World War II bomb exploded last October as army demolition specialists tried to secure it underwater in the northwest of the country. No one was injured.
The pump Tallboy of 5.4 tons was found in September 2019 at the bottom of a channel leading to the port of Szczecin during the works to deepen the pipeline. More than 750 people were evacuated to the operation of the sappers in the southern edge of the popular resort of Swinoujscie, on the Baltic Sea, which is the same as Szczecin was a busy port Nazi military during the war.
Polish demolition experts tried to neutralize the underwater bomb by remote deflagration, which involves burning the explosives, but the device detonated in the process.