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Captain America's shield

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Captain America's shield is the primary defensive and offensive piece of equipment used by the Marvel Comics superhero Captain America, and he is seldom seen without it. Over the years, Captain America has had the use of several different shields of varying composition and design.

The original shield

Captain America with his first, triangular shield, from Captain America Comics #1 (March 1941), art by Jack Kirby.
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Captain America with his first, triangular shield, from Captain America Comics #1 (March 1941), art by Jack Kirby.

In his first appearance in Captain America Comics #1, published by Timely Comics prior to the United States' entry into World War II, and as designed by Jack Kirby, Captain America (secretly Private Steve Rogers) was equipped with a triangular, badge-shaped shield. This original shield was said to be made from a bulletproof alloy. After complaints by rival comic book publisher MLJ that the shield design was too similar to that of their own patriotic hero the Shield, the triangular shield was replaced by a discus-shaped one.

While the origins and fate of the badge shield were never described in the original comics, decades later the story would be told through retroactive continuity. According to this, the original triangular shield was given by Captain America to King T’Chaka (father of T’Challa, the Black Panther) of the fictional isolated African country Wakanda as a pledge that the nation would remain uninvolved in the rest of the war. The original shield still resides in Wakanda as a national treasure.

A second triangular shield was given to him upon his return from that country, and Rogers would use this until given his disc-shaped shield. This second triangular shield was kept in storage with Rogers' other personal effects after the war. It was recovered at some point after Rogers joined the Avengers and kept at Avengers Mansion. However, it was destroyed by the villain Mr. Hyde during a raid on the mansion by Baron Zemo’s Masters of Evil. A third triangular shield was kept in the Smithsonian Institution, and would very briefly be used by Rogers years later.

Yet another of the triangular shields is currently being used by Elijah Bradley, the teenage hero known as the Patriot and leader of the Young Avengers.

The indestructible shield

Captain America Vol. 5, #5, Captain America and his indestructible shield. Art by Steve Epting.
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Captain America Vol. 5, #5, Captain America and his indestructible shield. Art by Steve Epting.

The circular shield most associated with Captain America made its debut in Captain America Comics #2. A concave metal disc roughly 2.5 feet in diameter and weighing 12 pounds, it is virtually indestructible and has remained his most constant shield over the decades.

Again through retroactive continuity, it was established that the shield was presented to Rogers by President Franklin D. Roosevelt. The shield was created by an American metallurgist named Dr. Myron MacLain, who had been commissioned by the US government to create an indestructible armor material to aid the war effort. MacLain experimented with vibranium, an alien metal found only in Wakanda that had unique vibration absorption properties.

During one of his experiments to fuse vibranium with a steel alloy, MacLain fell asleep and woke to find the experiment a success. However, this was due to an unknown catalyst entering the process during his slumber, and he was unable to duplicate the result. The vibranium-steel mix was then poured into a mold for a tank's upper hatch to create the disc shape and painted to become Captain America's symbol.

Rogers' indestructible shield has often been referred to as being an adamantium-vibranium alloy. This is not the case: adamantium was only developed after Rogers was revived from suspended animation, during MacLain's later experiments to try and duplicate the material of the shield (the substance made its first appearance in Avengers Vol. 1 #66, July 1969).

The adamantium-vibranium error first arose in the Captain America entry in the Official Handbook of the Marvel Universe (the composition of the shield was accurately described in the Adamantium entry) and was propagated in several subsequent stories by writers using the Handbook as a reference. Writer Kurt Busiek finally set the record straight in Avengers Annual 2001, establishing there that the shield is made of vibranium and steel.

The vibranium in the shield is what absorbs virtually all of the kinetic impact from any blows that the shield receives, allowing it to withstand incredible amounts of force without injuring Rogers in the process. The vibranium is also a likely factor in the way Rogers throws his shield: he often uses it to ricochet around a room and strike various opponents with little loss of velocity in its forward movement after each impact.

When Rogers returned from suspended animation, Tony Stark "improved" the shield by incorporating electronic and magnetic components in it so that Rogers could even control it in flight. However, Rogers soon discarded the additional components because he found that it upset the balance of the shield.

During his early years in the Avengers, when it was not firmly established that the discus-shaped shield was indestructible, the shield was destroyed or lost several times in the comics, to return with no explanation. It was retconned that these were steel replicas, with the actual shield being borrowed by Stark for analysis and returned to Rogers later.

Destroying the indestructible

While the shield was dented by Thor during a fight with Rogers due to the power of the Odinforce (Thor repaired it later), to date, the shield has been destroyed only twice, both times ultimately due to the same agency.

(During the Infinity Gauntlet storyline, Thanos (with the aid of the Gauntlet), shattered the shield in combat with Captain America. However, after Adam Warlock assumed control of the Gauntlet, he reset time and undid the damage. Consequently, this event is no longer part of history.)

The first time was when it was partially destroyed by Doctor Doom during the Secret Wars mini-series, who was using the power of the god-like being known as the Beyonder. Rogers used the side effect of the Beyonder reclaiming his power, a "wish effect", to reconstruct the shield. However, this would have repercussions years later.

When Rogers dropped his shield in the middle of the Atlantic Ocean during an adventure, the shield sank to the bottom, seemingly lost forever, and he used several replacement shields for some months. A recovery team working for Tony Stark managed to retrieve the shield from the ocean floor, but when it was dropped on the deck of the ship, it shattered into dozens of pieces.

Examining the pieces with Stark's help, Rogers and Stark discovered that when Rogers put the shield back together with the Beyonder's machines, a small submolecular imperfection was introduced into the vibranium: one solitary molecule was left out of alignment. With each additional impact over the years, the misalignment spread to neighbouring molecules, steadily growing until the molecular bonds of the shield were completely broken down and it shattered. However, the consequences were far graver, as the shattering of the shield did not stop this chain reaction; the instability continued to grow, creating a vibranium "cancer", a shockwave that was propagating throughout the world, violently detonating any vibranium it found, from mineral deposits to vibranium used in the construction of ships and equipment. The shockwave was travelling to the Great Vibranium Mound in Wakanda, where the resulting explosion could destroy the world.

To prevent this, Rogers travelled to Wakanda with the pieces of the shield taped together, prepared to sacrifice what remained of it in an attempt to absorb the shockwave. However, the villain Klaw (who was made up of living sound waves) had reached Wakanda ahead of him. Klaw stood in the path of the shockwave, absorbing it himself and increasing his own powers considerably. When Klaw next attacked Rogers, the latter instinctively raised the taped-together shield in defense. When Klaw struck the shield, his shockwave-augmented power realigned its vibranium molecules and restored the shield. Rogers then defeated Klaw.

Future versions

Given its powerful symbolism, the indestructible shield has been shown in many alternate futures of the Marvel Universe.

Other shields

Captain America brandishing his photonic energy shield. Cover for Captain America Vol. 3 #9, by Andy Kubert
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Captain America brandishing his photonic energy shield. Cover for Captain America Vol. 3 #9, by Andy Kubert

External links

 


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