Artifacts on image, some ideas please.

Have you look on the neg with a loupe?
 
That could be a still from an old episode of Doctor Who! It's quite a cool effect!
 
Reticulation, maybe?
It looks too large scale for any of the reticulation I've seen. I used to get it on Neopan 400 before getting paranoid with keeping my stop, fix and wash temperatures within a few degrees of each other. For that emulsion, the reticulation looked like a crazy paving pattern, with each tile being maybe 20-30 times the size of the grain in the image (so quite small).
 
^ interesting thanks, but I had to check what reticulation was first!
The processor thought it was maybe something to do with sudden temperature change as when you take a camera from a cold to very warm atmosphere or vice-versa.
 
I took a film out of an old camera and the emulsion looked like crazy paving, and that's before developing. I assumed that it wasn't worth developing in that state, so dumped it, was I right?
 
It is fungus tracks in the gelatine emulaion layer.
not uncommon in old film processed or not.
 
The fungus is quite random in how it spreads. Some times it expands out from centre points. And leaves other areas clear.
you would never know till the film is processed.
 
The fungus is quite random in how it spreads. Some times it expands out from centre points. And leaves other areas clear.
you would never know till the film is processed.
I noticed on the leader and when I wound it on the the reel for the tank I noticed that there was also the crazing on the small bit left on the spool, so it sacrificed the film to have a look in the light and the whole roll was affected.

I thought that the emulsion had dried up so it would have just flaked away in the chems which is why I didn't bother developing but do you think it would have developed with a crazy paving design across each frame?
 
Interesting stuff, only hope I haven't introduced fungus into my Contax!
I wouldn't worry about that too much - fungal spores are everywhere. Keeping the camera in a moist environment will encourage them to grow, keeping it somewhere relatively cool and dry will keep it in good condition.
 
You can see an example of reticulation here.
 
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