Silvering of a negative can be a result of "dichroic fog." Some developer & film combinations were, and it seems still are, very prone to this problem. Dichroic fog is usually uniform, from the pictures above it looks like the silvering is proportional to silver density, and so this may not be dichroic fog as we know it.
What film, developer and agitation were used to make these negatives?
Microdol developer (without the "X") was very prone to creating dichroic fog. When Kodak changed their black and white films c. 2005 the problem seems to have gone away (and I no longer had to scour ebay for packets of discontinued Microdol-X and could use the metol/sulfite/salt DIY Microdol). The "-X" indicated a magic silver sequestering agent that mitigated dichroic fog. Somewhere on Photrio/APUG Photo Engineer/Ron Mowery revealed the X compound to be a mercaptan, thankfully an oderless one.