United States Army Engineer Research and Development Laboratory explained

The United States Army Engineer Research and Development Laboratory (ERDL) was a United States Army Corps of Engineers research facility located at Fort Belvoir, Virginia.[1]

History

The ERDL was formed in 1947 when the Army's Engineer Board was redesignated as the U.S. Engineer Research and Development Laboratory, or ERDL.[2]

Army Equipment Development milestones

Among other things, the ERDL was responsible for the creation of the ERDLator water treatment device in World War II, the ERDL woodland camouflage pattern in 1948, and the updated M1950 lensatic compass.[2]

The ERDL also established the first U.S. Army research group dedicated to night vision systems in 1954, called the Research and Photometric Section.[3]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: GL History - Chapter 4. 2012-08-26. https://web.archive.org/web/20120209140742/http://gsl.erdc.usace.army.mil/gl-history/Chap4.htm. 2012-02-09. dead.
  2. Pennington, John, History of the U.S. Army Engineer Topographic Laboratories 1920-1970, Ft. Belvoir, VA: Army Engineer Topographic Laboratories, AD-785 549, Nov. 1973
  3. http://www.nvl.army.mil/about/index.php Night Vision & Electronic Sensors Directorate - Fort Belvoir, VA