Fifty years ago the U.S. Weather Bureau, predecessor of NOAA's National Weather Service, helped sponsor a young scientist from the Scripps Institution of Oceanography to begin tracking carbon dioxide in Earth's atmosphere at two of the planet's most remote and pristine sites: the South Pole and the summit of the Mauna Loa volcano in Hawaii. This week NOAA, Scripps, the World Meteorological Organization, and other organizations will celebrate the half-century anniversary of the global record of carbon dioxide in Earth's atmosphere—often referred to as the "Keeling Curve" in honor of that young scientist, Charles David Keeling.
NOAA Celebrates 50-Year Carbon Dioxide Record
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Seeded on Wed Dec 19, 2007 4:34 PM
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