Keeling was born in
Scranton, Pennsylvania, to Ralph Keeling and Grace L Keeling (née Sherberne). His father, an investment banker, excited interests of
astronomy in a 5-year-old Charles, while his mother instilled a lifelong love of music. He graduated with a degree in
chemistry from the
University of Illinois in 1948. Charles Keeling earned a PhD in
chemistry from
Northwestern University in 1953 under
Malcolm Dole, a polymer chemist. Most of Dole's graduates were going straight into the oil industry; Keeling "had trouble seeing the future this way" and had become interested in
geology, for which he had acquired most of the undergraduate coursework during his PhD. Keeling had applied for postdoctoral positions as a chemist almost exclusively to geology departments "west of the continental divide." He received an offer from
Harrison Brown who had recently started a
geochemistry department at
California Institute of Technology. He was a postdoctoral fellow in
geochemistry there until he joined
Scripps Institution of Oceanography in 1956, and was appointed professor of
oceanography there in 1968.[4]
At
Caltech he developed the first instrument able to measure carbon dioxide in atmospheric samples with consistently reliable accuracy.[5] Keeling camped at
Big Sur where he used his new device to measure the level of carbon dioxide and found that it had risen since the 19th century.
Work with Scripps Institution of Oceanography, 1958–2005
Keeling started collecting carbon dioxide samples at the base in 1958.[3] 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'sScience 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
Keeling was an enthusiastic outdoorsman who made many hiking and camping trips to the Western mountains, particularly the
Cascade Mountains of
Washington state. He was an active member of the
Wilderness Society for much of his life.[15]
Keeling married Louise Barthold in 1954. They had five children, one of whom (
Ralph Keeling) followed in his father's footsteps and is a climate scientist at
Scripps Institution of Oceanography. Another one of his children, Eric Keeling, currently teaches biology at SUNY New Paltz.[16] Charles Keeling was also an accomplished classical pianist who almost chose a career in music. Keeling was a founding director of the
University of California San Diego Madrigal Singers. He was also general chairman of the citizens committee which drafted the
Del Mar General Plan (or "Community Plan") in 1975.[17]
At a
White House ceremony held in July 1997, Keeling was presented with a "special achievement award" from
Vice PresidentAl Gore. Keeling was honored "for 40 years of outstanding scientific research associated with monitoring of atmospheric carbon dioxide in connection with
Mauna Loa Observatory".
The Keeling Curve is "engraved in bronze on a building at Mauna Loa and carved into a wall at the
National Academy of Sciences in Washington." It was also a chart on the wall in a classroom at
Harvard University where Revelle had moved to teach in the 1960s and where among others, student
Al Gore would see and "marvel" at it. In 2006, Gore featured the graph in the
book and movie An Inconvenient Truth.[5]
The Charles David Keeling apartments at
Revelle College of the
University of California San Diego, opened in 2011, were designed to emphasize environmental awareness and minimize ecological impact.
Dr Keeling's Curve (2014), one-man play written by George Shea and performed by
Mike Farrell.[18]
He was a member of the commission on global pollution of the International Association of Meteorology, and scientific director of the Central CO2 Calibration Laboratory of the World Meteorological Organization.
Selected publications
Keeling, Charles D. (1958). "The Concentration and Isotopic Abundances of Carbon Dioxide in Rural Areas". Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta. 13: 322–334.
doi:
10.1016/0016-7037(61)90023-0.
Pales, Jack C.; Keeling, Charles David (1965). "The Concentration of Atmospheric Carbon Dioxide in Hawaii". Journal of Geophysical Research. 70 (24): 6053–6076.
Bibcode:
1965JGR....70.6053P.
doi:
10.1029/JZ070i024p06053.
Keeling, Charles D. (1970). "Is Carbon Dioxide from Fossil Fuel Changing Man's Environment?". Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society. 114 (1): 10–17.
JSTOR985720.
^
Harris, DC (2010). "Charles David Keeling and the story of atmospheric CO2 measurements". Analytical Chemistry. 82 (19): 7865–70.
doi:
10.1021/ac1001492.
PMID20536268.
^“The
Keeling Curve Prize rewards a diverse selection of projects reducing greenhouse gas emissions or increasing carbon uptake.” Retrieved October 5, 2019.
Further reading
Weiner, Jonathan. The Next One Hundred Years: Shaping the Fate of Our Living Earth. New York: Bantam, 1990.
Matthews, Samuel W. “Under the Sun: Is Our World Warming?,” National Geographic 178(4) (October 1990), pp. 66–99.
Weart, Spencer R. The Discovery of Global Warming. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2003.
Kolbert, Elizabeth. “The Climate of Man,” The New Yorker [three part series], April/May 2005.
Bowen, Mark. Thin Ice: Unlocking the Secrets of Climate Change in the World’s Highest Mountains. New York: Henry Holt, 2005.
Harris, Daniel C. “Charles David Keeling and the Story of Atmospheric CO2 Measurements?,” Analytical Chemistry 82(19) (2010), pp. 7865–70.