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  1. Fritz Haber

    Fritz Haber (9 December, 1868 - 29 January, 1934) was a German chemist, who received the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1918 for his development of synthetic ammonia, important for fertilizers and explosives. He is also credited as the "father of chemical warfare" for his work developing and deploying chlorine and other poison gases during World War I. Despite his contributions to the German war effort, …

  2. Freddy Cannon

    Freddy Cannon (born Frederick Anthony Picariello, December 4 1940, in the North Boston suburb of Lynn, Massachusetts) is an American rock and roll singer. He learned to play guitar as a boy and in high school formed a band. Singing vocals, he emulated the hard-driving style of singing star Little Richard. Picariello eventually signed with Swan Records in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, a recording studio in which master music promoter Dick Clark had an interest, …

  3. Brian Douglas Wells

    Brian Douglas Wells was a pizza delivery man who was killed by a time bomb explosive fastened to his neck, purportedly under duress from the maker of the bomb. After he was apprehended by the police for robbing a bank, the bomb exploded. The bizarre affair was subject to much attention in the mass media. In July 2007, two conspirators, Marjorie Diehl-Armstrong and Kenneth Barnes, were indicted for the robbery.

  4. Frederick Augustus Abel

    Sir Frederick Augustus Abel, 1st Baronet FRS (17 July 1827-6 September 1902) was an English chemist. Born in London, Abel studied chemistry for six years under A. W. von Hofmann at the Royal College of Chemistry, then became professor of chemistry at the Royal Military Academy in 1851, and three years later was appointed chemist to the War Department and chemical referee to the government. During his tenure of this office, which lasted until 1888, …

  5. Hudson Maxim

    Hudson Maxim (February 3, 1853 - May 6, 1927), was a U.S. inventor and chemist who invented a variety of explosives, including smokeless gunpowder. He was the brother of Hiram Stevens Maxim, inventor of the Maxim gun and uncle of Hiram Percy Maxim, inventor of the Maxim Silencer. A man of many trades, started his career as publisher of books about penmanship and the sale of articles related to penmanship, like special inks and pens.

  6. Blaster Bates

    Blaster Bates is the name used by Derek McIntosh Bates, a British explosives and demolition expert, born in Crewe, who made a series of sound recordings from the 1960s to 1980s, recounting bizarre and funny experiences from his long career, and also tales of his hobbies of motorcycling, hunting and shooting. He was also much in demand as an after-dinner speaker.

  7. Joseph Wilbrand

    Joseph Wilbrand was a German chemist. He discovered trinitrotoluene in 1863, but the compound's use as an explosive was not developed until later. In 1863, he made a breakthrough in field of thermo chemistry by inventing trinitrotoluene or TNT which was obtained by the nitration of toluene.In 1860, the Prussian E.Schulz aimed at making an agent siles. But later on he found the procedure to be too complicated.

  8. Philip Eaton

    Philip E. Eaton (b. 1936) is a Professor Emeritus of Chemistry at the University of Chicago. He and his fellow researchers were the first to synthesize the "impossible" cubane molecule in 1964. Working with Mao-Xi Zhang he is reported as having been the first to make Octanitrocubane in 2000 or earlier. Because of its high density and highly strained C-C bonds it was expected to be the most powerful explosive discovered, but apparently has not lived up to expectations.

  9. Peter Woulfe

    Peter Woulfe (1727 - 1803) was an Irish chemist and mineralogist who first had the idea that wolframite might contain a previously undiscovered element. In 1779, Woulfe reported the formation of a yellow dye when indigo was treated with nitric acid. Later it was discovered by others that he had formed picric acid, which eventually was used as the first synthetic dye, an explosive and an antiseptic treatment for burns. He is also credited with inventing the Woulfe Bottle, …

  10. Charles Edward Munroe

    Charles Edward Munroe (24 May 1849 - 1938) was a U.S. chemist, and discoverer of the Munroe effect. He was born in Cambridge, Massachusetts and studied at the Lawrence scientific school of Harvard, graduating in 1871. He then took a job as a chemist at the university, until 1874 when he moved to the United States Naval Academy at Annapolis. In 1886 he joined the Naval Torpedo Station at Newport, Rhode Island as a chemist, where he discovered the Munroe effect, …

  11. Henry Sampson

    Henry Thomas Sampson (born in Jackson, Mississippi in 1934) is an American inventor. He is considered one of the many brilliant black inventors today. He graduated from high school in the year 1951 from Lanier High School, located in Jackson Mississippi. After Graduating he attended Morehouse College for a couple of years before transferring to Purdue University. He received a Bachelor's degree in science from Purdue University in 1956.

  12. Jan Baalsrud

    Jan Baalsrud (born 1917 - died 1988) was a commando in the Norwegian resistance trained by the British. He was born in Oslo and lived in Kolbotn from the 1930ies to the 1950ies. He arrived in Britain in 1941 where he joined the Norwegian Company Linge. In 1943, he and numerous other commandos embarked on a dangerous mission to destroy a German air control tower and recruit for the resistance movement. This mission was compromised when he and his fellow soldiers, …

  13. Nikolai Kibalchich

    Nikolai Ivanovich Kibalchich was a Russian revolutionary, the main explosive expert for Narodnaya Volya (the People's Will), and a rocket pioneer.

  14. Seamus Robinson

    Seamus Robinson, an Irish rebel and later a politician, was born in Belfast. He joined the Irish Volunteers in 1913, and later participated in the Easter Rising of 1916. In 1917, he came to Tipperary and together with Sean Treacy, Dan Breen and Seán Hogan, he led the party which took part in an attack on a convoy transporting gelignite at Soloheadbeg in county Tipperary. They shot two policemen dead and stole the explosives, …

  15. Carl Neuberg

    Carl Alexander Neuberg (1877-1956) was an early pioneer in biochemistry, and often referred to as the Father of Biochemistry. He was the first editor of the journal "Biochemische Zeitschrift". This journal was founded in 1906 and is now known as the "FEBS Journal". Neuberg was born in Hanover, Germany and studied chemistry at the University of Berlin. In his early work in Germany, he worked on solubility and transport in cells, …

  16. Paul Ambrose Oliver

    Paul Ambrose Oliver (1830 - 1912) was an American explosives inventor.

  17. Elizabeth Ann Duke

    Elizabeth Ann Duke (born November 25, 1940) is a former American teacher, philanthropist, and militant fugitive best known for her involvement an armed communist group which advocated violent overthrow of the U.S. government, and subsequent flight from prosecution. She is currently wanted by the Federal Bureau of Investigation, Duke was born in Beeville, Texas on November 25, 1940 but given her date of birth as April 20, 1941.

  18. Vladimir Nikolayevich Ipatieff

    Vladimir Nikolayevich Ipatieff (also Ipatiev,) (November 21, 1867 (November 9 OS) - November 29, 1952) was a Russian and American chemist. His most important contributions are in the field of petroleum chemistry. Born in Moscow, Ipatieff first studied artillery in the Mikhailovskaya artillery academy in Petersburg, then later studied chemistry in Russia and Germany. His first works in chemistry were devoted to the study of metals and explosives.

  19. Master Pow Explosive
  20. Joseph Explosive
  21. Emma Explosive
  22. Joseph Thee Explosive
  23. Johnny Explosive
  24. Trae Explosive
  25. Jade Explosive
  26. Explosive

    i m 17year single boy who don have any girlfren.

  27. Explosive

    That's for you to find out!

  28. Explosive Inc

    Add me az yur buddy...

  29. Ingar Olav Moen

    Dr INGAR MOEN: Defence R&D imoen@frontline-canada.com Ingar Olav Moen is the Director of Science and Technology Policy, with Defence R&D Canada, and is responsible for science policy issues, strategic planning, technology forecasting and international R&D coordination. Dr. Moen obtained a B.Sc. in Combined Honours Mathematics and Physics from the University of British Columbia and a PhD in Theoretical Physics from the University of Toronto .

  30. Max Hitchins Hd

    Dr. Max - The Boomerang Man Dr Max and his boomerang principle .... Perhaps one of the oldest business principles ... What you send out - comes back Speaking topics

  31. Michael Burghardt

    Master Sergeant Michael Burghardt is an explosive ordnance disposal technician in the United States Marine Corps. MSgt Burghardt came to prominence in 2005 when the "Omaha World-Herald" published a photograph of him in Ramadi, Iraq making a defiant gesture. On September 19, 2005, Burghardt was injured by an improvised explosive device near Ramadi. He refused to be carried away on a stretcher and instead walked under his own power to the waiting medevac.

  32. Tony Swansson

    Tony Swansson is the Boeing Deputy Program Manager for the Department of Homeland Security’s Secure Border Initiative (SBInet) Program. He is responsible for leading the Program Management Team and establishing strong relationships with the Department of Customs and Border Protection. Prior to his current position, Tony was the Director of Airport Security Programs for Homeland Security group.

  33. Explosive Ahsan
  34. Alfred Herrhausen

    Alfred Herrhausen (30 January 1930 - 30 November 1989) was a German banker and Chairman of Deutsche Bank. From 1971 onwards he was a member of the bank's board of directors. Herrhausen fell victim to a sophisticated roadside bomb shortly after leaving his home in Bad Homburg on 30 November 1989. He was being chauffeured to work in his armoured Mercedes-Benz, with bodyguards in both a lead vehicle and another following behind.

  35. Bob William Woodruff

    Robert Warren "Bob" Woodruff is an American television journalist. Although his journalism career dates back to 1989, he is most widely known for briefly replacing Peter Jennings as co-anchor of ABC News' weekday news broadcast, World News Tonight in January 2006 — and, later that month, becoming the first American news anchor to be wounded in a war zone when he was nearly killed by a roadside bomb in Iraq.

  36. Franz Fuchs

    Franz Fuchs (December 12 1949 in Gralla, Styria - February 26 2000 in Graz) was a xenophobic Austrian terrorist. Between 1993 and 1997 he killed four people and injured 15, some of them seriously, using three improvised explosive devices and five waves of 25 mailbombs in total.

  37. Stephen Tibble

    Police Constable Stephen Andrew Tibble QPM (1953 - February 26 1975) was a police constable in the London Metropolitan Police who was killed by a Provisional Irish Republican Army member/Volunteer, Liam Quinn, whom Tibble was chasing through Barons Court, London. PC Tibble, who was married and had been a serving officer for only six months, was off duty when he saw a man escaping from colleagues.

  38. Max Goldstein

    Max Goldstein was a Romanian communist and terrorist. Born in Bârlad to a Jewish family, he worked as a clerk and moved to Bucharest, where he became a Communist sympathizer. Sentenced to 10 years in prison, he escaped and fled to Odessa (part of Imperial Russia at the time), returning with money and new instructions. He lost a hand, presumably while doing experiments with explosives, and replaced it with a hook, being known to the police as the "man with the hook".

  39. Tony Gauci

    Tony Gauci is a former proprietor of a clothes shop in Malta. According to evidence given at the Pan Am Flight 103 bombing trial in 2000, Mr Gauci sold the clothes which were said to have been wrapped around the improvised explosive device (IED) that brought the aircraft down. He was the only witness to link Abdelbaset Ali Mohmed Al Megrahi directly to the IED, and was therefore instrumental in convicting Megrahi on 31 January 2001.

  40. John H. Parkes

    John H. Parkes is an explosives expert. He was at the crash scene soon after Pan Am Flight 103 exploded above Lockerbie, Scotland on December 21, 1988. Parkes disputes the "official version" that the aircraft was brought down by a small amount of plastic explosive in an IED, wrapped in clothing and packed inside a suitcase in one of the baggage containers of PA 103. Instead, Parkes believes that illegal munitions were loaded on the aircraft, …

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