1. Life in the Trenches- WWI 2. Do Now • How do you think life is for soldiers over in Iraq? • What type of things do you think they do on a daily basis? • What do…
Slide 1BACKGROUND INFORMATION: ALL QUIET ON THE WESTERN FRONT World War I, Erich Maria Remarque, Main Characters Slide 2 BEGINNING OF WWI WWI officially began in 1914 with…
1.Parasitology Parasitesinclude things that live internal (endoparasites) or external (ectoparasites) to the infected (or infested) host Broadly speaking, all pathogens may…
1. Trench Warfare usually about seven feet deep and six feet wideprotected by barbed-wire entanglements and machine-gun posts 2. 3. Trench Warfare 4. GAS Chlorine destroyed…
Slide 1 Why Europe? Industrial Revolution is at it’s peak; modernization led to sense that European’s were at the peak of world civilizations. Europe had 25%…
Slide 1Board Review: ENVIRONMENTAL Stony Brook University Hospital Joanne Kim, PGY3 Slide 2 Frostbite A 34-year-old man fell asleep on the sidewalk in the snow. Examination…
Slide 1 “THE GREAT WAR” 1914 to 1918 Slide 2 By early 1900’s, European nations began massive military build up, mainly to protect overseas interests. Slide 3 M: Militarism…
http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/FWWtrench.htm Alliances No Man's Land is the term used by soldiers to describe the ground between the two opposing trenches. Its…
World War I (1914-1918) Leadership, fronts, conditions Leadership during WWI Kaiser Wilhelm II GERMANY Georges Clemenceau FRANCE Woodrow Wilson U.S Victor Emmanuel ITALY…
PowerPoint Presentation Illnesses Suffered World War Ⅰ Joanna Jianga What diseases and illnesses were common in the trenches of World War 1? Trench foot Shell shock Blindness…