Tale of the TV Tapes: Apollo 11 Mission Archive Mystery Unspools
By Leonard David
Senior Space Writer
posted: 13 August 2006
09:44 am ET

http://space.com/news/060813_apollo11_tapes.html

Back in July 1969, the first moonwalks by Apollo 11’s Neil Armstrong and 
Buzz Aldrin are frozen forever moments in the history books. But it 
turns out that millions of riveted spectators back on Earth were on the 
receiving end of substantially degraded television showing the epic event.

The highest-quality television signal from Apollo 11’s touchdown zone in 
the moon's Sea of Tranquility—from an antenna mounted atop the Eagle 
lunar lander—was recorded on telemetry tapes at three tracking stations 
on Earth: Goldstone in California and Honeysuckle Creek and Parkes in 
Australia.

Scads of the tapes were produced—and now a search is on to locate them. 
And if recovered and given a 21st century digital makeover, they could 
yield a far sharper view of that momentous day, compared to what was 
broadcast around the globe.

But Apollo 11 is a memory rewind—now over 37 years old. Nobody is quite 
sure just how much longer the original slow-scan tapes will last … that 
is, if they haven’t already been erased.

Handled and archived

“I would simply like to clarify that the tapes are not lost as such, 
which implies they were badly handled, misplaced and are now gone 
forever. That is not the case,” explained John Sarkissian, operations 
scientist at the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research 
Organization’s (CSIRO) Parkes Radio Observatory in Parkes, Australia.

Sarkissian said the tapes were appropriately handled and archived in the 
mid 1970’s after the hectic activity of the Apollo lunar landing era was 
over. “We are confident that they are stored at [NASA’s] Goddard Space 
Flight Center [in Greenbelt, Maryland] … we just don’t know where 
precisely,” he told SPACE.com. It is important to note, Sarkissian 
added, that there is no inference of wrong-doing, incompetence or 
negligence on the part of NASA or its employees.

“The archiving of the tapes was simply a lower priority during the 
Apollo era. It should be remembered, that at the time, NASA was totally 
focused on meeting its goal of putting a man on the Moon and returning 
him safely to the Earth. No sooner had they done that, than they had to 
repeat it again a few months later, and then do it again, repeating it 
for a total of seven lunar landing missions … including Apollo 13,” 
Sarkissian pointed out.

Making it tough to track down the whereabouts of the data, many of those 
involved in the archiving of the tapes have since moved on, retired or 
passed away, “taking their corporate memory of where the tapes are with 
them,” Sarkissian said.

It is important not to exaggerate the quality of the images being 
sought, Sarkissian added. “The SSTV was not like modern high definition 
TV and nor was it even equal in quality to the normal broadcast TV we 
are accustomed to viewing,” he said.

Still, the SSTV was better than the scan-converted images that were 
broadcast at the time—which is the only version currently available, 
Sarkissian concluded.

Paper trail

A small independent group of Australian and U.S. Apollo tracking station 
veterans have embarked on a new search for the Apollo 11 tapes.

The group is hot on a cold paper trail regarding the location of the 
data. They’re also on the lookout for anyone involved in the management, 
disposition and storage of the Apollo tapes at NASA Goddard—or any other 
NASA or NASA-utilized facility where they may have been shipped.

Technical spokesman for the group is Bill Wood, a retired Apollo 
tracking station engineer in Barstow, California. He supported all of 
the Apollo missions at Goldstone – part of NASA’s worldwide network of 
deep space antennas run by the Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in 
Pasadena, California.

Wood hasn’t been happy of late with some reports saying that they are 
looking for “missing Apollo videotapes”—as well as tabloid claims that 
NASA had somehow bungled a task.

“That’s the furthest thing from the truth,” Wood told SPACE.com. “There 
are no lost Apollo video tapes,” he emphasized.

Never-before-seen view

For the last three or four years, the private group has been searching 
for special raw data recordings that contain unconverted slow-scan 
television (SSTV), recorded as a backup in case of an equipment glitch 
or a video circuit outage during the historic moon strolls of Armstrong 
and Aldrin.

Since there were no problems converting the slow-scan signals to 
National Television System Committee video standards, there was no need 
to use the backup telemetry recordings. Hundreds of boxes of Apollo-era 
magnetic tapes were subsequently shipped to NASA Goddard, later to be 
likely turned over to the National Record Center in Suitland, Maryland, 
Wood said.

Most of the Apollo tapes were later returned to NASA Goddard, including 
the raw Apollo 11 SSTV tapes. However, what happened to the tapes is not 
known. Because the SSTV was of superior quality to the scan-converted 
pictures broadcast out to the world at large, the hope is to recover 
them and give the public a higher-quality, never-before-seen view of the 
first human expedition sent to the Moon. Along with video, vintage 
Apollo 11 telemetry is also being sought.

Wood said he doubts the tapes have been trashed. On the other hand, 
there’s a 50/50 chance they were recycled.

“Since telemetry recording tapes back then cost $90 to $100 a reel … 
well, that was back when a $100 dollars was a $100 dollars,” Wood said. 
A magnetic rehab center at Goddard, he said, may have wiped the tapes 
clean—a budget-saving measure for reuse of the recording tapes.

“What we’re hoping, though, is that somebody, maybe, might have saved 
some of them,” Wood added. “We want to interest people to see something 
better than it happened at the time.”

Range of formats

Meanwhile, at the Goddard Space Flight Center, the search is on.

“Hopefully, if we can find one set of tapes we can find them all,” said 
Dave Williams of the National Space Science Data Center (NSSDC) at the 
NASA field center. “We still have some possibilities we’re looking into, 
so I’d say the tapes might be found and depending on how they have been 
stored may well be readable,” he told SPACE.com.

Williams and several colleagues are engaged in the Lunar Data Project—a 
different effort to take relevant, scientifically important Apollo data 
archived at NSSDC—analog data, microfilm, microfiche, photographic film, 
or hard copy documents and digitize that range of formats.

If the data were more readily available and usable in today’s data rich 
and readable world, restoring Apollo data could provide a wealth of 
information for scientific studies and planning for future lunar 
exploration.

Migration of data

“There’s a lot of old data that we don’t seem to have,” suggested Philip 
Stooke, Associate Professor at the University of Western Ontario’s 
Department of Geography in London, Ontario, Canada. “I think more 
Apollo-era science data is missing too.”

Hard at work on an atlas of lunar exploration, Stooke told SPACE.com 
that he was personally looking for images of the Moon taken by Explorer 
49, a NASA radio astronomy mission that settled into lunar orbit in 
1973. The probe carried a panoramic camera to monitor the deployment of 
its booms.

“It seems that the science data were preserved…but not those images,” 
Stooke said.

The entire lunar data hide and seek saga that’s alive and well here in 
the U.S. is being repeated in Russia too. “I work with people in Moscow 
who are trying to recover old lunar data,” Stooke added.

The worry that old Apollo tapes can deteriorate is a valid concern, 
Stooke said. “Migration of data to new media is essential in digital 
archiving…and it’s an ongoing problem.”

What about the CD-ROMs of today? Are they going to be readable in 50 years?

“Don’t count on it,” Stooke responded.

For details regarding the search for the Apollo 11 Slow-Scan Television 
Tapes, cast your eyes on these sites:

http://www.honeysucklecreek.net/Apollo_11/tapes/Apollo_11_Tape_Search_Flyer.pdf 


http://www.parkes.atnf.csiro.au/apollo11/apollo11_sstv_search_report.html




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