caves discovered from ww1 in france. who jeff gusky, a photographer and doctor from dallas

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CAVES DISCOVERED FROM WW1 IN FRANCE

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Page 1: CAVES DISCOVERED FROM WW1 IN FRANCE. WHO  Jeff Gusky, a photographer and doctor from Dallas

CAVES DISCOVERED FROM WW1 IN FRANCE

Page 2: CAVES DISCOVERED FROM WW1 IN FRANCE. WHO  Jeff Gusky, a photographer and doctor from Dallas

WHO

Jeff Gusky, a photographer and doctor from Dallas

Page 3: CAVES DISCOVERED FROM WW1 IN FRANCE. WHO  Jeff Gusky, a photographer and doctor from Dallas

WHAT

Graffiti from 2000 WWI soldiers on the walls of caves

Page 4: CAVES DISCOVERED FROM WW1 IN FRANCE. WHO  Jeff Gusky, a photographer and doctor from Dallas

WHERE

100 feet below the ground in Naours France in 2 miles of caves.

Page 5: CAVES DISCOVERED FROM WW1 IN FRANCE. WHO  Jeff Gusky, a photographer and doctor from Dallas

WHEN

First discovered in 2014 caves actually date back to middle ages.

Page 6: CAVES DISCOVERED FROM WW1 IN FRANCE. WHO  Jeff Gusky, a photographer and doctor from Dallas

WHY

Discovered by Gunsky because he wanted to research the midevil past but stumbled upon the graffiti.

Page 7: CAVES DISCOVERED FROM WW1 IN FRANCE. WHO  Jeff Gusky, a photographer and doctor from Dallas

WHAT HAPPENED

Jeff Gunsky was hoping to find out more about the caves in the French countryside for a Midevil study when he came upon Graffiti done by 2000 soldiers in WWI. The soldiers are from Austria, Great Britain, the US and other countries. This discovery is staying private and not open to the public to preserve the site. Gunsky’s photographs are being shared for the world.

Page 8: CAVES DISCOVERED FROM WW1 IN FRANCE. WHO  Jeff Gusky, a photographer and doctor from Dallas
Page 9: CAVES DISCOVERED FROM WW1 IN FRANCE. WHO  Jeff Gusky, a photographer and doctor from Dallas

MY OPINION

This is a good discovery as it tells us a lot about the soldiers who fought the war . There were one million people that died fighting near there so many soldiers who wrote on the walls of the cave would have died in battle. I think it should stay closed to the public so it remains preserved and can be used to learn more.

Page 10: CAVES DISCOVERED FROM WW1 IN FRANCE. WHO  Jeff Gusky, a photographer and doctor from Dallas

OTHER OPINION

This is not an important a discovery. WWI is not important and neither is history. It should be opened to tourists.