Field Form Performance
In this episode of the Field Form Podcast, we launch our Battle Physiology mini-series by stepping into one of the most consequential moments in American history: The Battle of Gettysburg. Anne reconstructs the human experience of the soldiers who marched, fought, and suffered across the Pennsylvania landscape in July 1863. We’re not just talking tactics and timelines. We’re talking what the body endured. You’ll explore: * What it meant to march 15–20 miles in blistering heat wearing wool * Why dehydration, sleep deprivation, and inadequate nutrition primed soldiers for collapse long before shots were fired * How terrain and load carriage shaped survival * The metabolic, psychological, and mechanical demands placed on Union and Confederate troops * How modern performance science helps us understand who could endure and why With storytelling and a physiological lens, this episode connects past to present, revealing how war stressors mirror what we see today in tactical athletes, endurance environments, and combat deployments.
5 episodios
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