Gents,
I will be working at a living history this June at Chatham Manor as a surgeon posted there. There will be a significant artillery demo as well, so I decided to research and discuss the damage caused by concussion and hearing loss.
I did the usual quick search on the forum regarding hearing loss, and I got this thread, which is the most applicable.
It degenerated into a yelling match on the farbiness of wearing ear plugs, which is not what I am looking for.
I do not know all that much on artillery loading and safety procedures of the period. I have learned indirectly that the idea of the crew members leaning back from the gun with one hand slapped over their ear was not correct. Originally I heard it was supposed to help prevent the concussion from blowing out the eardrums. Then I heard this was not correct. I have no documentation to confirm or refute either of those statements.
I also do not know if it's accurate to say the Original Cast put either cotton wads or scrap cloth in their ears as ear plugs. It does not seem as reliable as modern foam ear plugs, which expand in the ear canal to take up the shape of the canal and prevent the sound from entering.
I do remember from my audiologist that loud, concussive sounds tend to be "heard" by the body by coming in through the mastoid bone. (This is the bone which has the socket for your jawbone.) In theory when out in the field, we should be wearing those big, shooters earmuffs, which cover the ear and the mastoid bone. In reality, though, you will only see that acceptable at NSSA matches.
All that being said, hearing loss and tinnitus (which I have) was a major complaint during the war, and was right next to Rheum and the trots as the reasoning for getting a pension after the War.
I am looking for (preferably) primary references which discuss hearing loss protection (or lack thereof) in both official (as in regulations, etc.) and unofficial (as in letter/diary entries describing how the artillerists coped with the noise). I am not looking for modern reenactor safety suggestions or where to get the best earplugs.
Thanks in advance for any assistance! I posted here instead of Szabo's Szoo 'cause I know the folks here are more interested in research than UVT* discussions.
*Us Vs. Them
I will be working at a living history this June at Chatham Manor as a surgeon posted there. There will be a significant artillery demo as well, so I decided to research and discuss the damage caused by concussion and hearing loss.
I did the usual quick search on the forum regarding hearing loss, and I got this thread, which is the most applicable.
It degenerated into a yelling match on the farbiness of wearing ear plugs, which is not what I am looking for.
I do not know all that much on artillery loading and safety procedures of the period. I have learned indirectly that the idea of the crew members leaning back from the gun with one hand slapped over their ear was not correct. Originally I heard it was supposed to help prevent the concussion from blowing out the eardrums. Then I heard this was not correct. I have no documentation to confirm or refute either of those statements.
I also do not know if it's accurate to say the Original Cast put either cotton wads or scrap cloth in their ears as ear plugs. It does not seem as reliable as modern foam ear plugs, which expand in the ear canal to take up the shape of the canal and prevent the sound from entering.
I do remember from my audiologist that loud, concussive sounds tend to be "heard" by the body by coming in through the mastoid bone. (This is the bone which has the socket for your jawbone.) In theory when out in the field, we should be wearing those big, shooters earmuffs, which cover the ear and the mastoid bone. In reality, though, you will only see that acceptable at NSSA matches.
All that being said, hearing loss and tinnitus (which I have) was a major complaint during the war, and was right next to Rheum and the trots as the reasoning for getting a pension after the War.
I am looking for (preferably) primary references which discuss hearing loss protection (or lack thereof) in both official (as in regulations, etc.) and unofficial (as in letter/diary entries describing how the artillerists coped with the noise). I am not looking for modern reenactor safety suggestions or where to get the best earplugs.
Thanks in advance for any assistance! I posted here instead of Szabo's Szoo 'cause I know the folks here are more interested in research than UVT* discussions.
*Us Vs. Them
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