Who knows. Probably some custom design, then decided to sell it publicly after whatever contract period was up?
Also, watch out for sigma-delta ADCs, which only use one bit, and get the rest of the way with generous oversampling. Technically, the sample rate is quite high, but the accuracy (ENOB) depends on bandwidth. They're typically used for high accuracy at low bandwidth (16b+, 100s Hz), so yeah.
As for something good, many MCUs will have something suitable, or these seem likely:
https://www.digikey.com/short/vth2429dThe AD7276 looks quite good for as few pins as it is, and the prices go up from there. None of the prices are all that great, with this AD part of all things being at the bottom...(AD tends to be expensive, but worthwhile?).
You'll need quite a bit of programming to get there, however you do it... plus you still need to get it back to whatever the rest of your acquisition system is. So, I don't feel bad suggesting an MCU...
You may also wish to consider something more direct, like an SDR (software defined radio), or video capture something or other -- I'm not sure about the latter, but many things these days are little more than an ADC or DAC bolted to a high-speed port (USB2+, etc.), and the rest is solved in software, at great expense to CPU time (which, however, is extremely abundant these days, so it works).
An example that comes to mind is a USB-VGA dongle that turns out to be merely a three-channel DAC, streaming samples from a frame buffer; they've been repurposed for SDR (transmitter) use, even at rather high frequencies (possible thanks to the fast output transition times -- the pixel clock might only be 100 or 200MHz but the harmonics alias much higher, so, stick a wire in the output and you can literally chat on 900MHz with it, neato).
Afraid I know very little about these sort of dongles (above example excepted heh); I forget if the usual SDR modules have much if any input filtering/tuning or if they're basically a naked ADC, and likewise for video capture devices. But they're probably worth a look.
Oh, and good old fashioned oscilloscopes, of course. Plenty of those available with low sample rates (low for scopes is ~10M) and PC interfaces.
Mind, the one thing you'll likely miss with these (SDR, video capture, scope), is ENOB. Video and scope don't really care either way (8 bits is about good enough), but SDR makes it back on filtering. Basically, if you don't need much dynamic range, you're fine as well, but if you're hunting for weak harmonics or noise or whatever, you'll need whatever you need.
Tim