: The
Keeling Curve. Keeling worked at the Scripps Institution for 43 years during which time he published many influential papers.
Roger Revelle, the director of the
Scripps Institution of Oceanography, based at
La Jolla, California, persuaded Keeling to continue his work there. Revelle was also one of the founders of the
International Geophysical Year (IGY) in 1957–58 and Keeling received IGY funding to establish a base on
Mauna Loa in Hawaii, two miles (3,000 m) above sea level. Keeling started collecting carbon dioxide samples at the base in 1958. By 1960, he had established that there are strong seasonal variations in carbon dioxide levels with peak levels reached in the late northern hemisphere winter. A reduction in carbon dioxide followed during spring and early summer each year as plant growth increased in the land-rich northern hemisphere. In 1961, Keeling produced data showing that carbon dioxide levels were rising steadily in what later became known as the "
Keeling Curve". In the early 1960s, the
National Science Foundation stopped supporting his research, calling the outcome "routine". Despite this lack of interest, the Foundation used Keeling's research in its warning in 1963 of rapidly increasing amounts of heat-trapping gases. A 1965 report from
President Johnson's Science Advisory Committee similarly warned of the dangers of extra heat-trapping gases, which cause the temperature of the Earth to rise. The data collection started by Keeling and continued at Mauna Loa is the longest continuous record of atmospheric carbon dioxide in the world and is considered a reliable indicator of the global trend in the mid-level
troposphere. Keeling's research showed that the atmospheric concentration of carbon dioxide grew from 315 parts per million (ppm) in 1958 to 380 (ppm) in 2005, with increases correlated to
fossil fuel emissions. There has also been an increase in seasonal variation in samples from the late 20th century and early 21st century. ==Personal life==