Atmospheric carbon dioxide record from the South Pole
Graphics
Digital Data
C.D. Keeling and T.P. Whorf
Scripps Institution of Oceanography, University of
California, La Jolla, California 92093-0244, U.S.A.
Period of Record
1957-2004
Methods
Air samples are collected biweekly at the South Pole in 5-L evacuated
glass flasks exposed as triplets. From 1957 until October 1963, 5-L
glass flasks were exposed as singlets or pairs biweekly. Between 1960
and 1963, continuous in situ measurements of atmospheric CO2
concentrations were made. The data presented here are derived from both
the flask sampling program and the continuous sampling program. Greater
details about the sampling methods used at the South Pole are described in
Keeling et al. (1976) and in Bacastow and Keeling (1981). Air samples
collected at the South Pole are analyzed for CO2 concentration
at SIO through the use of an Applied Physics Corporation nondispersive
infrared gas analyzer with a water vapor freeze trap. In March 1983,
CO2-in-air mixtures prepared by SIO replaced
CO2-in-N2 as the
calibration gases used to ascertain instrument sensitivity, detect possible contamination,
and determine CO2 concentrations (Keeling et al. 2002).
For air samples collected at Barrow, Samoa, and the South Pole to be
considered indicative of uncontaminated background air, the replicate
flask samples must agree within 0.40 parts per million by volume (ppmv).

South Pole, Antarctica
Ice- and snow-covered plateau
89°59' S, 24°48' W
2810 m above MSL
Trends
Precise measurements of atmospheric CO2 at the South Pole have been
obtained by Scripps Institution of Oceanography (SIO) researchers since 1957.
This record is based primarily on biweekly flask sampling. The SIO
CO2 record from the South Pole shows
that annual-fitted averages of atmospheric CO2
concentrations rose from 314.78 ppmv in 1958 to 374.61 ppmv in 2004. This
represents an average annual increase of 1.3 ppmv per year.
References
- Bacastow, R.B., and C.D. Keeling. 1981.
- Atmospheric carbon dioxide concentration
and the observed airborne fraction. In B. Bolin (ed.), Carbon Cycle Modelling, SCOPE 16.
John Wiley and Sons, New York.
- Bacastow, R.B., J.A. Adams, Jr., C.D. Keeling, D.J. Moss, T.P. Whorf, and C.S. Wong. 1980.
- Atmospheric carbon dioxide, the Southern Oscillation, and the weak 1975 El Niño. Science
210:66-68.
- Conway, T.J., P. Tans, L.S. Waterman, K.W. Thoning, K.A. Masarie, and R.H. Gammon. 1988.
- Atmospheric carbon dioxide measurements in the remote global troposphere, 1981-1984. Tellus
40B:81-115.
- Gillette, D.A., W.D. Komhyr, L.S. Waterman, L.P. Steele, and R.H. Gammon. 1987.
- The NOAA/GMCC continuous CO2 record at the South Pole, 1975-1982. Journal of
Geophysical Research 92(D4):4231-40.
- Keeling, C.D. 1984.
- Atmospheric and oceanographic measurements needed for establishment
of a data base for carbon dioxide from fossil fuels. In The Potential Effects of Carbon
Dioxide-Induced Climatic Changes in Alaska. (Miscellaneous, etc.). The Proceedings of a
Conference. Fairbanks, Alaska, April 7-8, 1982. School of Agriculture and Land Resources
Management, University of Alaska, Fairbanks.
- Keeling, C.D., R.B. Bacastow, A.E. Bainbridge, C.A. Ekdahl, Jr., P.R. Guenther,
L.S. Waterman, and J.F.S. Chin. 1976.
- Atmospheric carbon dioxide variations at Mauna Loa
Observatory, Hawaii. Tellus 28(6):538-51.
- Keeling, C.D., R.B. Bacastow, A.F. Carter, S.C. Piper, T.P. Whorf, M. Heimann,
W.G. Mook, and H. Roeloffzen. 1989.
- A three-dimensional model of atmospheric CO2
transport based on observed winds: 1. Analysis of observational data. In D.H. Peterson (ed.),
Aspects of Climate Variability in the Pacific and the Western Americas. Geophysical
Monograph 55:165-235.
Keeling, C.D., P.R. Guenther, G. Emanuele III, A. Bollenbacher, and D.J. Moss. 2002.
Scripps
Reference Gas Calibration System for Carbon Dioxide-in-Nitrogen and Carbon
Dioxide-in-Air Standards: Revision of 1999 (with Addendum). SIO Reference Series No. 01-11.
CITE AS: Keeling, C.D. and T.P. Whorf. 2005. Atmospheric
CO2 records from sites in the SIO air sampling network. In
Trends: A Compendium of Data on Global Change. Carbon Dioxide
Information Analysis Center, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, U.S. Department of Energy, Oak Ridge,
Tenn., U.S.A.
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