First World War The first anti-tank mines were improvised during the
First World War as a countermeasure against the first tanks introduced by the
British towards the end of the war. Initially they were nothing more than a buried high-explosive
shell or
mortar bomb with its
fuze upright. Later, purpose-built mines were developed, including the
Flachmine 17, which was simply a wooden box packed with explosives and triggered either remotely or by a pressure fuze. By the end of the war, the Germans had developed row mining techniques, and mines accounted for 15% of U.S. tank casualties during the
Battle of Saint-Mihiel,
Third Battle of the Aisne,
Battle of Selle and
Meuse-Argonne Offensive.
Inter-War Period The
Soviet Union began developing mines in the early 1920s, and in 1924 produced its first anti-tank mine, the
EZ mine. The mine, which was developed by Yegorov and Zelinskiy, had a 1 kg charge, which was enough to break the tracks of contemporary tanks. Meanwhile, in Germany, defeat spurred the development of anti-tank mines, with the first truly modern mine, the
Tellermine 29, entering service in 1929. It was a disc-shaped device approximately 30 cm across filled with about 5 kg of
high explosives. A second mine, the
Tellermine 35 was developed in 1935. Anti-tank mines were used by both sides during the
Spanish Civil War. Notably, Republican forces lifted mines placed by Nationalist forces and used them against the Nationalists. This spurred the development of
anti-handling devices for anti-tank mines. The
Winter War between the Soviet Union and Finland also saw widespread use of anti-tank mines. Finnish forces, facing a general shortage of anti-tank weapons, could exploit the predictable movements of motorized units imposed by difficult terrain and weather conditions.
Second World War TM-35 mine at the Museum of Heroic Defense and Liberation of Sevastopol on Sapun Mountain,
Sevastopol The German
Tellermine was a purpose-built anti-tank mine first introduced in 1929. Some variants were of a rectangular shape, but in all cases the outer casing served only as container for the explosives and fuze, without being used to destructive effect (e.g.
shrapnel). Tellermine was the prototypical anti-tank mine, with many elements of its design emulated by later mines such as the Pignone P-1, NR 25, and
M6. Because of the Tellermine's high operating pressure, a vehicle would need to pass directly overhead to detonate it. But since the tracks represent only about 20% of a tank's width, the pressure fuze had a limited area of effect. As one source has it: "Since they were pressure-detonated, these early anti-tank mines typically did most of their damage to a tank's treads, leaving its crew unharmed and its guns still operational but immobilised and vulnerable to aircraft and enemy anti-tank weapons ... During
World War II they (the Wehrmacht) began using a mine with a
tilt-rod fuze, a thin rod standing approximately two feet up from the center of the charge and nearly impossible to see after the mine had been buried. As a tank passed over the mine, the rod was pushed forward, causing the charge to detonate directly beneath it. The blast often killed the crew and sometimes exploded onboard ammunition. Now that tank crews were directly at risk, they were less likely to plow through a minefield." Although other measures such as
satchel charges,
sticky bombs and bombs designed to magnetically adhere to tanks were developed, they do not fall within the category of
land mines as they are not buried and detonated remotely or by pressure. The
Hawkins mine was a British anti-tank device that could be employed as a mine laid on the road surface for a tank to run over setting off a crush fuze or thrown at the tank in which case a timer fuze was used. Shaped charge devices like the
Hohl-Sprung mine 4672 were also developed by Germany later in the war, although these did not see widespread use. The most advanced German anti-tank mine of the war was their minimal metal
Topfmine. In contrast to the
dinner plate mines such as the German Tellermine were
bar mines such as the German
Riegel mine 43 and Italian
B-2 mine. These were long mines designed to increase the probability of a vehicle triggering it, the B-2 consisted of multiple small shaped charge explosive charges along its length designed to ensure a
mobility kill against enemy vehicles by destroying their tracks. This form of mine was the inspiration for the British
L9 bar mine.
Modern Several advances have been made in the development of modern anti-tank mines, including: • more effective explosive payloads (different explosive compounds and shaped charge effects) • use of non-ferrous materials making them harder to detect • new methods of deployment (from aircraft or with artillery) • more sophisticated fuzes (e.g. triggered by magnetic and seismic effects, which make a mine
blast resistant, or which ignore the first target vehicle to drive over it and therefore can be used against convoys or mine rollers) • sophisticated "anti-handling" devices to prevent or discourage tampering or removal. ==Design==