Sentences with phrase «keeling began»

Charles Keeling began monitoring carbon dioxide in Hawaii in the 1950's.
In 1953, a young scientist named Charles David Keeling began to measure the amount of carbon dioxide (CO2) in the atmosphere around Pasadena, Calif..
Before Charles Keeling began his measurements atop Hawaii's Mauna Loa volcano in 1958, accurate, continuous measurements of CO2 in the atmosphere had proved difficult to get.
When Keeling began his project in 1958 the global carbon dioxide level was about 337 parts per million, already up from the preindustrial levels of about 280 parts per million.
When Charles Keeling began collecting data at Mauna Loa in 1958, the concentration had risen to about 315 parts per million.
In 1958, Scripps Institution climatologist Charles Keeling began making precise measurements of atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations at Mauna Loa Observatory.
Keel begins his sermon after the introductory music and prayer end.

Not exact matches

Keel responds to this charge by telling me about a Hindu student who began coming to Jacob's Well for the art and leaving before the service began, but then started staying just for the music, and finally stayed for the whole service.
About ten years after the liberation — our lives having run for some time on a pretty even keel — I began to experience a variety of physical disabilities as well as mental / emotional afflictions; sometimes the two were difficult to distinguish.
«It is very special to honor King Arthur Flour, a unique company with roots that extend back to the beginning of our nation,» said ESOP Association President, J. Michael Keeling.
He and Patty made this final move so he could be closer to school, so, with his workday beginning at 6:30 a.m., he wouldn't have to spend three nights a week sleeping in a San Jose State dorm room after having studied tapes until 11 p.m. Just as a point of speculation, it is suggested that maybe he would like to coach until he's 90 or 95, keel over on the field in mid-practice and be buried under one of the goalposts that bookend all football fields like gateways to another world.
These aircraft measurements were done at the time Charles Keeling was beginning continuous carbon dioxide measurements at Mauna Loa, Hawaii.
Keeling's father, Charles, began the project in 1958.
The American Chemical Society has named the graph that charts that rise — called the Keeling Curve, so named after the scientist who began the CO2 measurements — as a National Historic Chemical Landmark.
The outcome is that every year since the Keeling measurements began in 1958, it is evident that 57 % of emissions have on average been UPtaken by the terrestrial and oceanic biospheres (Canadell et al. 2007, Table 1).
IPCC begins its attribution story with the Revelle factor, RF, also called the buffer factor, formulated by Revelle and Suess in 1957 on the threshold of the development of a surge in atmospheric CO2 by Revelle protégé Charles Keeling.
And the same measurements show again the same low CO2 from the beginning of the Keeling era 1955.
The first lecture offered a brief history of carbon counting, beginning with a look at late American scientist Charles Keeling's 1958 attempt to measure the amount of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere.
By contrast, RCP 8.5 seems fairly close to what we are doing now — though with the agreement of the US and China, the world's largest emitters, to curb emissions, and with optimism in the air for international agreement in Paris at the end of 2015, there is some room at present to hope that we may, over the next few years, begin to bend the Keeling curve downward a bit.
It began as an anti-coal movement by environmentalists who roped in «scientists» like Keeling who was willing to fiddle the data by measuring his, I think his, invention the mythical «pristine well - mixed background» from the top of the world's largest active volcano surrounded by active volcanoes producing loads of carbon dioxide indistinguishable from man made from fossil fuels.
Jim had been invited to give a lecture in memory of Charles David Keeling, the legendary greenhouse pioneer who had shown that the atmospheric level of carbon dioxide has been rising steadily since 1958, when he first began monitoring the gas with an instrument on the summit of Hawaii's Mauna Loa volcano.
Graven HD, Keeling RF, Piper SC, et al., 2013, Enhanced Seasonal Exchange of CO2 by Northern Ecosystems Since 1960, Science, Vol: 341, ISSN: 0036 - 8075, pages 1085 - 1089 (the amplitude of the seasonal vegetation effect measured aboard planes (3 km to 6 km) has, north of 45 ° N grown by 50 % w.r.t airplane observations carried late 1950s beginning 1960s.)
Nevertheless, President Obama and the new Congress, beginning January 21, need to figure out a way to put funding for climate change, being cast as a national priority, on an even keel with funding for other national priorities such as health care and economic recovery.
David's late father - in - law was the pioneering scientist Charles David Keeling, who began to record the concentrations of CO2 in the atmosphere in the 1950s, and who shared with David science's predictions on the effects of persistent greenhouse gasses, including rises in mean temperature, disrupted weather patterns, wildfires, floods, strengthening tropical storms, ocean acidification, sea level rise, melting of glaciers and other effects.
The chart documenting this rise is perhaps the most iconic in all of climate science, known as the «Keeling Curve» for Charles David Keeling, the Scripps Institution of Oceanography scientist who began and maintained the monitoring program.
The rate of growth in carbon dioxide concentrations in the atmosphere has accelerated since the beginnings of the Keeling Curve.
Particularly welcome was the CO2 monitoring project begun at Mauna Loa by Charles D. Keeling — another Callendar correspondent.
The Keeling responsible for the Keeling Curve was Charles David Keeling (April 20, 1928 - June 20, 2005) who began to collect samples of the atmosphere from the Earth's surface in remote locations in California including Big Sur and the White Mountains.
This was strongly stimulated by Charles Keeling's accumulating data of the steadily increasing concentration of well - mixed atmospheric CO2, measured at the Mauna Loa Observatory, beginning in 1958, at about 317 ppm (and presently at about 390 ppm).
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