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New Land Mine Detection
Tool Called Major Breakthrough
August 30, 2006
Bureau of International Information Programs, U.S. Department
of State
(Original article can be found here)
Hand-held device combines metal detector with ground-penetrating
radar
Washington -- The U.S. State Department announced August
29 what it calls a major breakthrough in land mine detection
and removal technology.
The U.S. Department of Defense has begun to field a hand-held
device that combines metal detection with ground-penetrating
radar, called a Handheld Standoff Mine Detection System
(HSTAMIDS).
What makes the new device so important, according to the
announcement, is that HSTAMIDS can screen out the many bits
and pieces of metal found in mined areas and on former battlefields
that give a "false positive" signal to metal detectors.
International mine action standards require land mine removal
personnel to dig up every piece of metal found by their
detectors to ensure that no land mine has been missed, the
State Department says. This metallic clutter now can be
ignored and not unearthed, saving time and, by discovering
land mines faster, many innocent lives.
The new dual system has undergone extensive testing and
rigorous evaluation in the United States and elsewhere,
the announcement said. The system was used in humanitarian
land mine removal field evaluations and demonstrations in
Southeast Asia and Africa in 2004-2005.
Overall, the system was field tested with more than 10,000
mine targets and more than 50,000 pieces of metallic debris
in widely varied environmental conditions in nine test arenas
around the world. It was tested by five different humanitarian
land mine removal teams from Afghanistan, Angola, Cambodia
and Thailand before beginning humanitarian mine action operations,
according to the announcement.
Canada, the Netherlands, Sweden and the United Kingdom
were among governments that joined with the United States
in the testing effort. During this particular series of
field tests, the newly trained dual-system operators significantly
outperformed experienced metal detector operators. The metal
detectors employed in these tests currently are used throughout
the mine removal community.
The Defense Department's Humanitarian Demining Research
and Development Team has fielded 2,000 new detection systems
with the U.S. military since the spring of 2006. By the
year's end, that number should rise to 3,100 systems delivered
to the field. Additionally, the manufacturer is supplying
the new system to humanitarian mine removal operations in
Cambodia, Afghanistan and Thailand, the announcement states.
The announcement of the new detection system is available
on the State Department Web site. A related fact sheet is
also available there.
For more information about the U.S. land mine removal program,
see the electronic journal, "Protecting Lives, Restoring
Livelihoods: The U.S. Program To Remove Landmines."
(Distributed by the Bureau of International Information
Programs, U.S. Department of State. Web site: http://usinfo.state.gov)
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