By the end of World War I, the total number of casualties exceeded 40 million

 By the end of World War I, the total number of casualties exceeded 40 million


, with more than 20 million dead and 20 million wounded. And many soldiers met their ends in the trenches.


Aside from the constant onslaught of machine-gun fire, soldiers were also exposed to numerous diseases in the trenches, including cholera, typhoid fever, and "trench foot" — which caused dead tissue to spread across a soldier's foot after he'd been in a wet trench for too long. The unsanitary conditions of makeshift kitchens and toilets only quickened the spread of illness. And the troops who survived enemy attacks and avoided getting sick were forced to endure rats, lice, and the trauma of seeing their friends' corpses rot without any way to properly bury them.


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