This article relies largely or entirely on a
single source. (March 2024) |
Tu Huo Qiang (Chinese: 突 火 枪; Pinyin: tūhuǒqiāng) was a precursor to guns invented in the 1250s. It consisted of a moso bamboo tube which had been partially hollowed out and loaded with gunpowder and a single projectile, called the zi kē (子窠).[ citation needed] Chinese historian Fiang Jiasheng in the 1950s first posited it as evidence of the first "occlusive bullet", whereby a "pellet wad" occluded the barrel. [1]
This article relies largely or entirely on a
single source. (March 2024) |
Tu Huo Qiang (Chinese: 突 火 枪; Pinyin: tūhuǒqiāng) was a precursor to guns invented in the 1250s. It consisted of a moso bamboo tube which had been partially hollowed out and loaded with gunpowder and a single projectile, called the zi kē (子窠).[ citation needed] Chinese historian Fiang Jiasheng in the 1950s first posited it as evidence of the first "occlusive bullet", whereby a "pellet wad" occluded the barrel. [1]