Ammunition

Ammunition encompasses the projectiles, propellants, and cartridges that weapons fire — from stone balls and iron shot through paper cartridges, metallic cartridges, and modern specialized rounds. Ammunition development has driven firearms evolution as much as the weapons themselves.

Ammunition

Category Overview

Overview

Ammunition refers to the complete round or components required to fire a weapon — projectile, propellant, primer, and cartridge case (in modern terms). The development of ammunition has been as important to weapons history as the development of the weapons themselves; improvements in propellants, bullet design, and cartridge technology have repeatedly transformed what firearms could do.

Pre-Cartridge Ammunition (before 1860s)

Projectiles

  • Stone ball — Earliest cannon ammunition; required specialized quarrying; irregular shape reduced accuracy
  • Iron ball (roundshot) — Standard cannon projectile; 3–68 pounds; effective against ships, walls, and formations
  • Lead ball — Standard small-arms projectile through the musket era; .40–.80 caliber
  • Minié ball — Conical lead bullet with hollow base; the base expanded on firing to engage rifling; allowed muzzle-loading rifles to be loaded as fast as smoothbores; transformed infantry warfare in the American Civil War

Propellant

  • Black powder (gunpowder) — Potassium nitrate, charcoal, and sulfur; the only propellant until the 1880s; produces heavy smoke; hygroscopic (absorbs moisture); burns relatively slowly

Ignition

  • Touch hole — Direct ignition of the charge; earliest cannon
  • Slow match — Smoldering cord held to the flash pan (matchlock)
  • Wheel lock — Spinning serrated wheel against iron pyrite; 1500s
  • Flintlock — Flint strikes steel frizzen; creates spark in pan; 1610s–1860s
  • Percussion cap — Mercury fulminate cap struck by hammer; 1820s; reliable in wet conditions

Metallic Cartridge Era (1860s onward)

The self-contained metallic cartridge — combining primer, propellant, and bullet in a brass case — transformed firearms:

  • Rimfire — Primer compound in the cartridge rim; .22LR still uses this
  • Centerfire — Replaceable primer in the center of the case base; the standard for all modern military ammunition
  • Smokeless powder — Nitrocellulose-based propellant; replaced black powder 1880s–1890s; produces far less smoke; allows higher velocities; enabled the modern high-velocity small-bore rifle

Modern Ammunition Types

  • Ball — Standard military ball ammunition; full metal jacket; penetrates without expanding
  • Hollow point — Expands on impact; maximizes tissue damage; prohibited in military use by Hague Convention
  • Armor-piercing — Hardened steel or tungsten core; penetrates body armor and light vehicles
  • Tracer — Pyrotechnic compound in the base; visible trajectory; used for fire adjustment
  • Incendiary — Phosphorus or other incendiary compound; sets fires on impact

This article is a stub. Contributions covering specific ammunition types, propellants, and historical development are welcome.

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