There are a total of 15,436 images here. Of these, 2,811 are in greyscale. 035 is not in chronological order 061 grayscale 062 grayscale; extremely dim print, worst at end 063 grayscale 064 grayscale 065 grayscale 066 grayscale 071 switch to grayscale from 071-298 to end, scanned at 12 bits, normalized to 8 bits 072 grayscale 134 contains a small FORTRAN program and its output, starting at 134-044 136 had printer/operator battles which preclude preferred pagination methods during scanning also a rare example of the 1132 printing SIDEWAYS, as well as slightly diagonally 137 paper motion appears right before a printer jam. this motion occurred at the time of printing, not at the time of scanning. the paper really looks like that. wow artifact owned and scanned by Ohio Historical Connection - imaging configuration is different wow - chronologically falls between 013-084 and 013-085. Observe the page serial numbers that the paper manufacturer stamped in red at the perforations. Only odd numbers are stamped, so numbers are adjusted to reflect what number would be at the top perforation of the indicated page. The times indicated are at the Wow! artifact transition boundary. Data: page EST ser # 013-084 03:03:38 161100 wow-001 13:20:05 161130 wow-074 09:13:24 161203 013-085 09:14:51 161208 The five pages skipped to -085 are about what would be needed to eject and tear the printer paper, start the program again, etc. and are probably mostly blank. The thirty pages leaving -084 are more intriguing. There are many legitimate activities that could have happened, so having these pages today would have been quite interesting. The 3 AM run termination would also be noteworthy, provided that someone examines other runs to see if this is unusual. M. Abel 12/29/2017