Some very interesting images. Where are you getting them from? Seems to be some confusion over the subjects...
Mark Allen M wrote:
Mosquito attack on Gestapo HQ in Denmark

Actually the Amiens prison raid.
Mark Allen M wrote:

Very brave looking Lanc crew

Both Handley Page Halifaxes, not Lancasters. (Wing planform and fin and rudder shapes are distinct.)
The example with a hole was 'friendly fire' - it would have been a bomb from a higher flying RAF bomber falling through the lower flying aircraft, thankfully not far enough to have fused and gone off. Note the plaster on the mid upper gunner's eyebrow where the collapsing turret /bomb hit him on the way through.
On other occasions the rear gunner in his turret was knocked off the aircraft which returned without him.
I suspect (but I'm less certain) that the Hallibag with the missing stbd tail may well have lost it from a stick of bombs as well.
I'm assuming the two pictures are of different Halifaxes as I doubt the one with half the tail missing made it back.
Mark Allen M wrote:
And another photo of what seems Duxford loaded with aircraft everywhere

Certainly not Duxford (not hardstanding of that kind there, and it was mainly a fighter base - by this period - 44-45, a USAAF fighter base) and Prestwick seems likely as Dave Smith's said. Canadian built Lancaster's mid-upper turrets were further forward than the British built examples, and lower, simpler cupola type - from memory Martin turrets.
Mark Allen M wrote:
The aircraft is a Martin Baltimore, all too rarely seen, and used mainly in N Africa and the Med.
Thanks for sharing!
Regards,