Archaeologists Just Stumbled Across An Unexploded Civil War Artillery Shell At Gettysburg Though the shell was destroyed, historians suspect that it was fired by Confederate forces on July 2, 1863. While sweeping the grounds of Gettysburg National Military Park as part of a rehabilitation project, an archaeologist detected something buried beneath the earth with his metal detector — and two feet down, he came across a 10-pound artillery shell from the Civil War. Realizing that it was likely live, he laid it down on the ground gently, snapped a photo, and "ran for the hills." Experts then visited the park to examine the 160-year-old ordnance, and after identifying it as a Burton round likely fired by Confederate troops from a Parrott cannon or 3-inch ordnance rifle during the Battle of Gettysburg, they swiftly destroyed it as a safety measure — read more at the link in our profile. While sweeping the grounds of Gettysburg National Military Park as part of a rehabilitation ...
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