That's very interesting. Do you have any links to circuit diagrams?
I do if you're prepared to squint a bit! I've never found a copy online, I meant to scan the whole manual sometime but my trial copy of Scan-n-Stitch expired (they're A3 schematics).
Attached are the input board schematic, including i/p protection (Datron used a combination of JFETs, Zeners and an 88k 8W series resistor chain!), Ib compensation and bootstrapped supplies. Q11 (TO92) is thermally coupled (superglue) to the LM312 (TO99) under a plastic cover. The double sided PCB copper is arranged to be as isothermal as possible around them. All resistors are carbon film (apart from the high >10Mohm ones which are carbon composition).
As I say, they managed to achieve >10G input resistance, <2pA/'C and 0.2uV/'C using VERY humble parts by today's standards and with no cpu to do auto-zero or correction in these units. My unit holds within 1-2uV from cold to operating temp on the 10mV range (x100 gain) with no appreciable long term drift (well aged by now!)
The next generation - 1065/1061 are all evolutions of the same basic starting point, but with a cpu for compensation, autocal, autozero etc.
I've also attached the relevant page from the circuit description.
Hope it's at least of historic interest anyway.