The Mk V CN Gas Grenade was an American riot-control grenade used mainly from the World War II era into the early Cold War for dispersing crowds and forcing people out of enclosed areas. Instead of exploding like a fragmentation grenade, it used a fuse that ignited an internal pyrotechnic mixture which heated and dispersed Chloroacetophenone, a tear-gas agent that causes intense eye watering, skin irritation, coughing, and temporary incapacitation. The gas vented through small holes in the metal body to form an irritating cloud around the grenade. CN was widely used in early police and military riot-control munitions before being largely replaced by CS gas, which became the more common tear gas from the mid-20th century onward.
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