Parachuting Dog Helped Win WWII | LiveScience

May 3rd, 2008

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The Allied airmen and women of World War II were certainly brave and skilled in battle, but even they couldn’t win the war on their own.

Plagued in the early, low-tech years of the war by dangerous afflictions such as altitude and decompression sickness, pilots got some help behind the front lines from a team of American physiologists who studied the effects on the body of flying.

Their research, which involved at least one parachuting dog, and the technology it initiated was a key to the Allied victory in the air, says Jay B. Dean of the University of South Florida College of Medicine.

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