Nazi Human Experiments: "A Jewish prisoner in a special chamber responds to changing air pressure during high-altitude experiments
Nazi Human Experiments: "A Jewish prisoner in a special chamber responds to changing air pressure during high-altitude experiments
Nazi Human Experiments: "A Jewish prisoner in a special chamber responds to changing air pressure during high-altitude experiments. For the benefit of the Luftwaffe, conditions simulating those found at 15,000 meters [49,000 ft] in altitude were created in an effort to determine if German pilots might survive at that height."
The prisoner falls unconscious (and later dies) from overexposure in a high-altitude chanber in Dachau
From March 1942 to August 1942, experiments were conducted at the Dachau concentration camp, for the benefit of the German Air Force, to investigate the limits of human endurance and existence at extremely high altitudes.
The experiments were carried out in a low-pressure chamber in which atmospheric conditions at high altitude (up to 68,000 feet) could be duplicated.
The experimental subjects were placed in the low-pressure chamber and thereafter the simulated altitude therein was raised. Most victimes died as a result, and many of the survivors suffered injury related to exposure to extreme atmospheric conditions
The defendants Karl Brandt, Handloser, Schroeder, Gebhardt, Rudolf Brandt, Mrugowsky, Poppendick, Sievers, Ruff, Romberg, Becker-Freyseng, and Weltz are charged with special responsibility for and participation in these crimes
Over the course of the Third Reich and the Holocaust, Nazi Germany conducted a series of medical experiments on Jews, POWs, Romani, and other persecuted groups. The experiments were conducted in concentration camps, and in most cases resulted in death, disfigurement, or permanent disability. Especially disturbing experiments included attempts to genetically manipulate twins; bone, muscle, and nerve transplantation; exposure to diseases and chemical gasses; sterilization, and anything else the infamous Nazi doctors could think up.
After the war, these crimes were tried as part of the Nuremberg Trial and ultimately led to the development of the Nuremberg Code of medical ethics. Continue reading
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