March 26, 2009

A truly amazing story - Nancy Evans and Earthrise

From the Los Angeles Times:
NASA's early lunar images, in a new light
Rising over the battered surface of the moon, Earth loomed in a shimmering arc covered in a swirling skin of clouds.

The image, taken in 1966 by NASA's robotic probe Lunar Orbiter 1, presented a stunning juxtaposition of planet and moon that no earthling had ever seen before.

It was dubbed the Picture of the Century. "The most beautiful thing I'd ever seen," remembered Keith Cowing, who saw it as an 11-year-old and credited it with eventually luring him to work for NASA.

But in the mad rush of discovery, even the breathtaking can get mislaid.

NASA was so preoccupied with getting an astronaut to the moon ahead of the Soviets that little attention was paid to the mountains of scientific data that flowed back to Earth from its early space missions. The data, stored on miles of fragile tapes, grew into mountains that were packed up and sent to a government warehouse with crates of other stuff.

And so they eventually came to the attention of Nancy Evans, a no-nonsense woman with flaming red hair that fit her sometimes-impatient nature. She had been trained as a biologist, but within the sprawling space agency she had found her niche as an archivist.

Evans was at her desk in the 1970s when a clerk walked into her office, asking what he should do with a truck-sized heap of data tapes that had been released from storage.

"What do you usually do with things like that?" she asked.

"We usually destroy them," he replied.
What follows is an amazing odyssey -- Nancy had the tapes but no way to read them. She finally found three readers and then another but none of them worked. Needless to say, the original Earthrise is back and since the original was scanned from 70mm film and the images distributed to the public were from a 35mm film photograph of the computer monitor, the new images are supposed to be amazing. The MoonViews blog has some wonderful photos of the drives, the tapes, the reconstruction (yes, they are working in what used to be a McDonald's restaurant) but they request that the images not be reproduced without permission. Posted by DaveH at March 26, 2009 7:39 PM
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