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Colonial magazine

Colonial Williamsburg magazine of the eighteenth century in Virginia, USA.

Magazine is the name for an item or place within which ammunition or other explosive material is stored. It is taken originally from the Arabic word "makahazin" meaning "warehouse" via Italian and Middle French.[1]

Ammunition storage areas[]

Magazine is also a term used for a place where large quantities of ammunition are stored for later distribution, or an ammunition dump. This usage is less common.

Field magazines[]

Shell lift, Les Landes, Jersey

A shell hoist within a fixed gun emplacement at Battery Moltke, used to lift ordnance from a room below

In the early history of tube artillery drawn by horses (and later by mechanized vehicles), ammunition was carried in separate unarmored wagons or vehicles. These soft-skinned vehicles were extremely vulnerable to enemy fire and to explosions caused by a weapons malfunction.

Therefore, as part of setting up an artillery battery, a designated place would be used to shelter the ready ammunition. In the case of batteries of towed artillery the temporary magazine will be placed, if possible, in a pit, or natural declivity, or surrounded by sandbags or earthworks. Circumstances might require the establishment of multiple field magazines so that one lucky hit or accident would not disable the entire battery.

Naval magazines[]

Animated gun turret with labels

Animated naval gun operations.

The ammunition storage area aboard a warship is referred to as a magazine or the "ship's magazine" by sailors.

Historically, when artillery was fired with gunpowder, a warship's magazines were built below the water line —- especially since the magazines could then be readily flooded in case of fire or other dangerous emergencies on board the ship. An open flame was never allowed inside the magazine.

More modern warships use semi-automated or automated ammunition hoists. The path through which the naval artillery's ammunition passed typically has blast-resistant airlocks and other safety devices, including provisions to flood the compartment with seawater in an emergency.

The separation of shell and charge gave the storage of the former the name "shell room" and the latter "powder room".

US Navy 030327-N-1328C-519 Aviation Ordnancemen assemble bombs aboard USS Theodore Roosevelt (CVN 71)

Weapons magazine aboard aboard USS Theodore Roosevelt (CVN 71), 2003.

Surface warships that have carried torpedoes, and ones that still do (such as the Mark 46 torpedo for antisubmarine warfare), have had torpedo magazines for carrying these dangerous antiship and antisubmarine weapons in well-defended compartments.

With the advent of missile-equipped warships, the term missile "magazine" has also been applied to the storage area for guided missiles on the ship, usually carried below the main decks of the warships. For ships with both forward and aft surface-to-air missile launchers, there are at least two missile magazines. Sometimes the magazines of guided-missile frigates and guided-missile destroyers have carried or do carry a mixture of various types of missiles: surface-to-air missiles, antisubmarine missiles such as the ASROC missile, and antiship missiles such as the Harpoon missile. See especially the Oliver Hazard Perry class frigates, owned by several different navies around the world, in which one 40-missile magazine carries a mixture of all three types of missiles: surface-to-air, surface-to-surface, and surface-to-underwater.

In aircraft carriers, the magazines are required to store not only the aircraft carrier's own defensive weapons, but all of the weapons for her warplanes, including rapid-fire gun ammunition, air-to-air missiles such as the Sidewinder missile, air-to-surface missiles such as the Maverick missile, Mk 46 ASW torpedoes, Joint Direct Attack Munitions, "dumb bombs", HARM missiles, and antiship missiles such as the Harpoon missile and the Exocet missile.

Nuclear weapons storage[]

Nearly every detail of nuclear weapons storage is highly classified, although many of the same principles of an ammunition dump would apply. The one consistent factor is the greatly increased security compared to that afforded to the storage of other weapons. Among surface warships, only the aircraft carriers of a very few navies (the U.S. Navy, French Navy, Russian Navy, and maybe one more, such as the Chinese Navy) carry nuclear weapons anymore, since all other surface warships are forbidden by international nuclear arms reduction treaties from doing so. The British Royal Navy no longer has any nuclear weapons on any of its surface warships, and furthermore, the Royal Air Force and the British Army no longer have any nuclear weapons. All British nuclear weapons are carried by their four Trident submarines.

As for the United States, all of these services are still armed with nuclear weapons: U.S. Air Force, U.S. Navy, and U.S. Army. Most of the nuclear weapons of the French Republic are carried by its fleet of five or six ballistic missile submarines.

See also[]

External links[]

References[]

  1. Harper, Douglas. [1]. Dictionary.com Online Etymology Dictionary. Accessed September 01, 2013.
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