Dachau was a primary site for Nazi medical experiments, including hypothermia studies, high-altitude pressure tests, and seawater ingestion experiments. Records from these experiments document the systematic torture of prisoners.
Content:
Logs of experiments showing how victims were exposed to extreme cold, pressured in decompression chambers, or forced to drink seawater.
Notes detailing the physical and psychological effects on victims, many of whom died as a result of the tests.
Research summaries written by Sigmund Rascher and others, intended to justify their findings as beneficial for German military strategy.
Significance:
These records are concrete evidence of the inhumane experimentation conducted under Nazi rule and reveal the pseudoscientific rationale used to justify these atrocities.
Where to Access:
Held in the U.S. National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) and at the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum.