ground-emplaced mine
Noun: A ground-emplaced mine is an explosive device that is deliberately placed and concealed on or just below the surface of the ground. It is designed to detonate when pressure is applied, typically when a person steps on it or a vehicle drives over it.
This term is used in military, security, and humanitarian contexts to describe a specific type of buried explosive hazard. It is a technical and descriptive compound noun.
- The soldiers advanced cautiously, aware that the area could be littered with ground-emplaced mines.
- Clearing ground-emplaced mines is a dangerous and painstaking task for humanitarian demining teams.
- The treaty prohibits the use of anti-personnel ground-emplaced mines.
The term is often used in formal reports, technical manuals, and legal documents concerning warfare and ordnance disposal. It precisely distinguishes these weapons from other types, such as naval mines or command-detonated devices.
- Landmine: A more common and general synonym.
- Anti-personnel mine: A type of ground-emplaced mine specifically designed to target individuals.
- Anti-tank mine: A type of ground-emplaced mine designed to destroy or disable vehicles.
- Booby trap: A broader category of hidden explosive devices, which may include ground-emplaced mines.
- Landmine
- Buried mine
While "ground-emplaced mine" is a precise technical term, in everyday language, the word "landmine" is far more frequently used to convey the same meaning. The compound term emphasizes the method of deployment (emplaced on the ground) as a key characteristic.
- an explosive mine hidden underground; explodes when stepped on or driven over