Unlike other tanks, the StuG III’s assault gun was fixed in place, instead of installed on a rotating turret. This meant its ...
During construction work at the Nordholz naval air base on the North Sea, workers uncovered a surprise: an almost intact ...
During construction at the Nordholz naval air base on the North Sea, workers uncovered a near-intact 29-tonne StuG III ...
Originally ordered as an armoured infantry support vehicle the Assault Gun or Sturmgeschutz Stug was increasingly employed from 1942 onwards as a tank destroyer It was responsible for the destruction ...
An almost completely preserved self-propelled artillery installation (ACS) StuG III from the Second World War was accidentally discovered at the Nordholz naval Airbase in Lower Saxony (Germany). As ...
Add Popular Science (opens in a new tab) More information Adding us as a Preferred Source in Google by using this link indicates that you would like to see more of our content in Google News results.