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mustard gas
(redirected from blistering agent)

   Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus, Encyclopedia, Wikipedia 0.03 sec.

mustard gas

Chemical weapon, developed by the Germans in World War I and first used on 12 July 1917. A vesicant and systemic poison, it attacks the lungs when inhaled, while the vapour attacks the eyes, causing blindness, and in liquid form causes suppurating blisters on the skin.

Its early use was highly successful as its full effect only became apparent some hours after an attack. During the first three weeks of mustard gas attacks by the Germans, 14,276 troops suffering cases of gas poisoning were admitted to British military hospitals and about 500 men died.



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? Mentioned in ? References in periodicals archive
 
The main chemicals found were mustard gas and an arsenic-based blistering agent called lewisite.
The Pentagon said Tuesday that it would notify 20,000 veterans of the 1991 Gulf War - four times more than previously announced - that they might have been exposed to nerve gas and blistering agents when a battalion of U.
Several hundred men from a North Carolina-based Army engineer battalion were in an area where a demolition team blew up a bunker that may have contained Iraqi rockets tipped with the nerve agent sarin and a mustard blistering agent.
 
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