
Behind the counter of an abandoned McDonalds lie 48,000 lbs of 70mm tape… the only copy of extremely high-resolution images of the moon.
(I can now make the photos of the pirate project public; they were private to flickr friends before)
The tapes were recorded 42 years ago by Lunar Orbiter 1 to map the lunar surface to plan landing spots for Apollo 11 onward. They have never been seen by the public because at the time, they were classified as they reveal the extreme precision of our 1960s spy satellites. Instead, all we have ever seen are the purposely grainy photo-of-a-photo images that were released to the public.
The spacecraft did not ship this film back to Earth. Instead, they developed the film on the Lunar Orbiter and then raster scanned the negatives with a 5 micron spot (200 lines/millimeter resolution) and beamed the data back to Earth using yet-to-be-patented-by-others lossless analog compression. Three ground stations on Earth (one was in Madrid) recorded the transmissions on magnetic tapes.
Recovering the data has proven to be very difficult, requiring technological archeology. The only working version of the Ampex tape player ($300K when new) was discovered in a Los Angeles chicken coop and restored with the help of the original designer. There is only one person on Earth who still refurbishes the tape heads, and the skills to read this data archive were on the cusp of disappearing forever. (Short video of image recovery)
The photo above is from the NASA LIORP project, and is a cropped subset of the first image retrieved. (full res)
Some of the applications of this project, beyond accessing the best images of the moon ever taken, are to look for new landing sites for the new Google Lunar X-Prize robo-landers, and to compare the new craters on the moon today to 40 years ago, a measure of micrometeorite flux and risk to future lunar operations.
and a post I made on the flight hardware I have on 
And a New Yorker carton from back in the day, referencing the banded images produced
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