k5083 wrote:
Before posting, sharing, selling, or making public in any way, first be sure it won't get you in some kind of trouble. I know nothing about this, it just seems to me from your description that there might have been a reason why most other people would have been disciplined for taking a camera where you did, and someone might still care.
Next question is whether you hold the copyrights in the images, which is not clear from what you wrote. If you don't, you may own the slides themselves and could sell them, but neither you nor the buyer would have the legal right to publish them, which includes putting them on the web. That obviously would affect their monetary value.
Then after that it comes down to what condition are the slides in, were they well exposed etc. to begin with, and is the subject matter cool. Sounds like the subject matter might be cool.
August
Back then, I enforced the law, rules, and regulations, and I abided by them religiously. I still have my paperwork authorizing me to photograph virtually anywhere on base, with few exceptions. I have no worries about any of my shots being illegal, either then, or now. I have seen private photos on the net of nuclear weapons, that were forbidden during my tour. Those shots would have gotten the photographer a few years in jail back then, but, today, no one seems to care.
I hold complete copyrights. I took every single photo in my collection. The images aren't as good as ones seen in coffee table books, but, at the time, I was using top of the line camera equipment, and had a decent photographer's eye. Very few shots have exposure or composition flaws. Some of the shots taken while I was actively handling an accident or incident are basically grab shots.