Why do tunnel diggers get the shakes?

Mining activity induces mechanical stress occurring in the rock mass. The effect of high pressure in the rock mass are mining tremors.
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Why were Tunnelers so respected?

They have earned the thanks of the whole Army for their contributions to the defeat of the enemy. Their fighting spirit and technical efficiency has enhanced the reputation of the whole Corps of Royal Engineers.
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What were the shakes ww1?

But by 1916, military and medical authorities were convinced that many soldiers exhibiting the characteristic symptoms—trembling “rather like a jelly shaking”; headache; tinnitus, or ringing in the ear; dizziness; poor concentration; confusion; loss of memory; and disorders of sleep—had been nowhere near exploding ...
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Is Thomas Shelby a Tunneler?

Thomas Shelby, protagonist of the popular BBC drama Peaky Blinders, was said to have served as a tunneller in the 179th Tunnelling Company.
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What did a Tunneler do in ww1?

On the Western Front during the First World War, the military employed specialist miners to dig tunnels under No Man's Land. The main objective was to place mines beneath enemy defensive positions. When it was detonated, the explosion would destroy that section of the trench.
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Tunnel Warfare During World War 1 I THE GREAT WAR Special



Does shell shock still exist?

The term shell shock is still used by the United States' Department of Veterans Affairs to describe certain parts of PTSD, but mostly it has entered into memory, and it is often identified as the signature injury of the War.
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What were tunnel diggers called?

Royal Engineer tunnelling companies were specialist units of the Corps of Royal Engineers within the British Army, formed to dig attacking tunnels under enemy lines during the First World War.
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What mental illness does Arthur Shelby have?

One of the major symptoms of PTSD is "recurrent, unwanted distressing memories or dreams of the traumatic event"[1]. A number of characters in Peaky Blinders appear to suffer from it, the most notable ones being Thomas Shelby, Arthur Shelby Jr., and Danny Whizz-Bang.
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Did Polly sleep with her son Peaky Blinders?

They came from a different society, he's a well-educated artist but she has never been educated, is the matriarch of a criminal gang and a murderess. However, he pursues and seduces her until things have begun to develop between them. Finally, Polly decides to come for him at night and sleeps with him.
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What is running chalk?

The term chalk in sports betting simply means that side of the bet is the favorite – usually a very heavy, or strong, favorite – to win that side of the bet.
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Why do soldiers get the shakes?

Combat stress reaction (CSR) is a term used within the military to describe acute behavioral disorganization as a direct result of the trauma of war. Also known as "combat fatigue", "battle fatigue", or "battle neurosis", it has some overlap with the diagnosis of acute stress reaction used in civilian psychiatry.
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Are they still finding bodies from ww1?

Many soldiers who died on the battlefield between 1914 and 1918 were never found. But the remains of eight men were discovered three years ago during engineering works in De Reutel, Belgium, before a ninth was later found.
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Why did soldiers get shell shock?

The shell-shocked soldier, they thought, had attempted to manage a traumatic experience by repressing or splitting off any memory of a traumatic event. Symptoms, such as tremor or contracture, were the product of an unconscious process designed to maintain the dissociation.
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What was the worst job in World war 1?

Of all the jobs in the infantry, “the runner's job was the hardest and most dangerous,” World War I veteran Lt. Allan L. Dexter observed in a 1931 newspaper article. “With a runner, it was merely a question of how long he would last before being wounded or killed.”
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Was Thomas Shelby real?

Was Thomas Shelby a real person? Nope! While some of the characters in Peaky Blinders are based on real historical figures (including politician Winston Churchill, trade unionist Jessie Eden, rival gang leader Billy Kimber and fascist leader Oswald Mosley) Cillian Murphy's character Tommy Shelby did not actually exist.
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What did Sabini take from Tommy's mouth?

Their raid gains the attention of the other faction in London, the Jews, who invite him to a sit down. However, Thomas is set upon by Sabini and his thugs, who slice the inside of Thomas's mouth with the sharp end of a razor, while his sister Ada is also accosted.
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Does Tommy have PTSD?

In Peaky Blinders it's presented through moments of horrific aggression, but Tommy's bleak detachment from life is a symptom; PTSD can be found in the deadening of emotion that allows Arthur and John to commit sickening acts of harm in a bareknuckle brawl, or an assault acted out with the razorblades stitched into ...
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Does Tommy cheat on Lizzie?

Throughout the years, Tommy and Lizzie have often argued, especially when it comes to his infidelity. It's clear he's still very much in love with his ex-wife and hasn't treated Lizzie well, but in recent scenes it appears he's sunk to a new low.
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What is Tommy Shelby diagnosed with?

Tommy was diagnosed with terminal tuberculoma earlier in the season, and in light of this, he tied up all loose ends with his family, naming his illegitimate son as his successor. Following a series of revelations, Tommy discovered that his diagnosis was a ruse, setting the stage for the show's final moments.
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What are they smoking in Peaky Blinders?

In a previous interview, Helen McCrory (who plays Aunt Polly in the film) revealed that they actually use herbal cigarettes. "They use herbal tobacco which has no nicotine and tastes horrible," the actress revealed to the Mirror. "They're the same type they smoke in theatre productions."
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What is it Tommy Shelby is smoking?

Tommy Shelby (Murphy) is smoking brown opium from a clay pipe and inhaling the contents once it is lit. During seasons 1 and 2 of Peaky Blinders, Tommy can be seen smoking the substance whilst in his chambers.
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What did a Tunneler do in the war?

The Australian Tunnelers are famous for their achievement particularly at the Battle of Messines Ridge in 1917. They were tasked with the preparation of tunnels and explosives beneath Hill 60 over seven months, working with the constant danger of collapse and of detection by the enemy.
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What is a tunnel bomb?

Tunnel bombs—or tunnel-borne improvised explosives devices (TBIEDs), to borrow from the nomenclature used to describe the many manifestations of improvised explosive devices—are exactly what they sound like: tunnels dug under enemy forces or fortifications for the purpose of blowing them up from underneath.
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What was the biggest explosion in ww1?

The Battle of Messines in June of 1917 witnessed what was arguably the single largest explosion of the pre-atomic age, when 19 underground mines packed with an estimated 1 million pounds of high explosives erupted beneath the German line, killing untold numbers of soldiers and shattering German morale before the real ...
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