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Digital Data
C.D. Keeling and T.P. Whorf
1981-2004
At Cape Matatula, American Samoa, weekly air samples are collected in 5-L evacuated glass flasks exposed in triplicate. Flasks are returned to the SIO for CO2 determinations, which are made using an Applied Physics Corporation nondispersive infrared gas analyzer. In May 1983, the CO2-in-air calibration gases were replaced with CO2-in-air calibration gases, which are currently used (Keeling et al. 2002).

NOAA established a monitoring project to observe the sea-level climate and atmospheric constituents of the tropical Southern Hemisphere at Cape Matatula, American Samoa, in 1973. NOAA operates both a continuous monitoring program (Waterman et al. 1989) and a flask sampling program (Conway et al. 1988) at Cape Matatula. Independently of NOAA, Scripps Institution of Oceanography (SIO) has also collected flask samples at American Samoa since 1981. On the basis of flask samples collected by SIO, the annual average concentration of CO2 rose from 340.60 ppmv in 1982 to 375.94 ppmv in 2004. This represents an average annual growth rate of 1.6 ppmv per year at American Samoa.
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.