BTW, I had left my old car parked over (technically "near") a sewer for a few days. I popped the hood one day and it was literally raining under there. To make matters worse, whatever was steaming out of that sewer was highly corrosive. Everything under that hood looked like it had aged (another) twenty years... in just a matter of days.
Not long after that, alternator died. Got another. It was DOA. Got another, it lasted five minutes. Before it died, it was running full-field... maximum output... 15.x volts. Alternators don't last long running full field and I could smell it, plus it was too hot to touch. The next one had more of a prophylactic behavior; it would run until it got hot then shutdown to protect itself. Once it cooled it would charge again.
Longer story short, voltage drop testing revealed weak grounding. So I ran *additional* wires from the engine to the frame, then from the frame to the battery. Alternator output returned to normal, and I quit frying them. Problem solved.
Batteries that go dead, sometimes or often don't recover, and suffer issues there after.