Hostname: page-component-84b7d79bbc-rnpqb Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-07-31T22:16:31.793Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

A benchmark for the environment: big science and ‘artificial’ geophysics in the global 1950s

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 February 2020

Benjamin W. Goossen*
Affiliation:
Harvard University, Department of History, Robinson Hall, 35 Quincy Street, Cambridge, MA 02138, USA
*
Corresponding author. Email: bengoossen@g.harvard.edu

Abstract

Security concerns during the early Cold War prompted United States strategists to solicit worldwide assistance in studying Earth’s physical environment. Comprehensive geophysical knowledge required cooperation between researchers on every part of the planet, leading practitioners to tout transnational earth science – despite direct military applications in an age of submarines and ballistic missiles – as a non-political form of peaceful universalism. This article examines the 1957–58 International Geophysical Year as a powerful fulcrum in the transfer of ideas about Earth’s global environment from Western security establishments to conservationists worldwide. For eighteen months, tens of thousands of researchers across every continent pooled resources for data collection to create a scientific benchmark for future comparisons. Illuminating Earth as dynamic and interconnected, participants robustly conceptualized humanity’s emergence as a geophysical force, capable of ‘artificially’ modifying the natural world. Studies of anthropogenic geophysics, including satellites, nuclear fallout, and climate change, conditioned the global rise of environmentalism.

Type
Articles
Copyright
© Cambridge University Press 2020

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

Footnotes

This article is based on research for my current project, ‘The year of the Earth (1957–1958): Cold War science and the making of planetary consciousness’, conducted with support from Harvard University, the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum, and the University of Sydney. For their comments, I thank David Armitage, Rachel Waltner Goossen, Alison Frank Johnson, Madeline Williams, the JGH editors, and two anonymous reviewers.

References

1 McNeill, J. R. and Engelke, Peter, The Great Acceleration: an environmental history of the Anthropocene since 1945, Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2016, p. 4.Google Scholar

2 Overviews include Launius, Roger, DeVorkin, David, and Fleming, James, eds., Globalizing polar science: reconsidering the International Polar and Geophysical Years, New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2010CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Barr, Susan and Lüdecke, Cornelia, eds., The history of the International Polar Years (IPYs), New York: Springer, 2010.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

3 Berkner, L. V., ‘International scientific action: the International Geophysical Year 1957–58’, Science, 119, 3096, 1954, pp. 570, 575.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed

4 Chakrabarty, Dipesh, ‘The climate of history: four theses’, Critical Inquiry, 35, 2, 2009, pp. 197222CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Robin, Libby, Sorlin, Sverker, and Warde, Paul, ‘Stratigraphy for the Renaissance: questions of expertise for “the environment” and “the Anthropocene”’, Anthropocene Review, 4, 3, 2017, pp. 246–58.Google Scholar

5 Doel, Ronald, ‘Quelle place pour les sciences de l’environnement physique dans l’histoire environnementale?’, Revue d’Histoire Moderne & Contemporaine, 56, 4, 2009, pp. 137–64CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Hamblin, Jacob, Arming Mother Nature: the birth of catastrophic environmentalism, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2013, pp. 17128Google Scholar; Oreskes, Naomi, ‘A context of motivation: US Navy oceanographic research and the discovery of sea-floor hydrothermal vents’, Social Studies of Science, 33, 5, 2003, pp. 697742.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

6 Lytle, Mark, The gentle subversive: Rachel Carson, Silent Spring, and the rise of the environmental movement, New York: Oxford University Press, 2007Google Scholar; Rome, Adam, The genius of Earth Day: how a 1970 teach-in unexpectedly made the first green generation, New York: Hill and Wang, 2013Google Scholar; Selcer, Perrin, The postwar origins of the global environment: how the United Nations built Spaceship Earth, New York: Columbia University Press, 2018.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

7 Warde, Paul, Robin, Libby, and Sörlin, Sverker, The environment: a history of the idea, Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2018, p. 108.Google Scholar

8 de Solla Price, Derek, Little science, big science, New York: Columbia University Press, 1963, p. 3CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Borgman, Christine, Big data, little data, no data: scholarship in the networked world, Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2015, pp. 34.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

9 ‘Eisenhower’s dilemma: talking peace and waging Cold War’, in Kenneth Osgood and Andrew Frank, eds., Selling war in a media age, Gainesville, FL: University Press of Florida, 2010, pp. 140–69; Wolfe, Audra, Freedom’s laboratory: the Cold War struggle for the soul of science, Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2018, pp. 91112.Google Scholar

10 Arendt, Hannah, The human condition, Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press, 1998, p. 2.CrossRefGoogle Scholar See Lazier, Benjamin, ‘Earthrise: or, the globalization of the world picture’, American Historical Review, 116, 3, 2011, pp. 602–30.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

11 Gavin, Francis, Gold, dollars, and power: the politics of international monetary relations, 1958–1971, Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina Press, 2004, pp. 1731Google Scholar; Mazower, Mark, Governing the world: the history of an idea, New York: Penguin, 2012, pp. 191243Google Scholar; Sluga, Glenda, Internationalism in the age of nationalism, Philadelphia, PA: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2013, pp. 79117CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Wertheim, Stephen, ‘Instrumental internationalism: the American origins of the United Nations, 1940–3’, Journal of Contemporary History, 55, 2, 2019, pp. 265–83.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

12 Bush, Vanavar, Science: the endless frontier, Washington, DC: Government Printing Office, 1945.Google Scholar

13 National Archives of Australia, Sydney, Australia (henceforth NAAS), C3830 C34/1 Part 1, James Hagerty, ‘The White House’, 25 June 1954.

14 MacKenzie, Donald, Inventing accuracy: a historical sociology of nuclear missile guidance, Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1990, pp. 95164Google Scholar; Jean Warner, Deborah, ‘Political geodesy: the Army, the Air Force, and the World Geodetic System of 1960’, Annals of Science, 59, 2002, pp. 363–89CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Doel, Ronald, ‘Constituting the postwar earth sciences: the military’s influence on the environmental sciences in the USA after 1945’, Social Studies of Science, 33, 5, 2003, pp. 635–66.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

15 England, Merton, A patron for pure science: the National Science Foundation’s formative years, 1945–57, Washington, DC: National Science Foundation, 1982, p. 211.Google Scholar

16 Antarctic research: elements of a coordinated program, Washington, DC: National Academy of Sciences, 1949, p. iii.

17 Berkner, Lloyd, Science and foreign relations: international flow of scientific and technological information, Washington, DC: Department of State, 1950, p. 3.Google Scholar

18 Needell, Allan, Science, Cold War, and the American state: Lloyd V. Berkner and the balance of professional ideals, Amsterdam: Harwood Academic Publishers, 2000, pp. 141–9.Google Scholar

19 Central Intelligence Agency Historical Collections, CIA General Records, CIA-RDP80B01676R002500100006-0, ‘Earth satellite vehicle (ESV)’, 4 October 1954, https://www.cia.gov/library/readingroom/docs/CIA-RDP80B01676R002500100006-0.pdf (consulted 3 September 2019).

20 Rudwick, Martin, Earth’s deep history: how it was discovered and why it matters, Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press, 2014, pp. 31180CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Davis, Robert, ‘Inventing the present: historical roots of the Anthropocene’, Earth Sciences History, 30, 1, 2011, pp. 6384.Google Scholar

21 Jonsson, Fredrik, Enlightenment’s frontier: the Scottish Highlands and the origins of environmentalism, New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2013CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Warde, Paul, The invention of sustainability: nature, human action, and destiny, 1500–1870, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2018.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

22 Grove, Richard H., Ecology, climate, and empire: colonialism and global environmental history 1400–1940, Cambridge: White Horse Press, 1997.Google Scholar

23 Coen, Deborah, Climate in motion: science, empire, and the problem of scale, Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press, 2018, pp. 205–38.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

24 Stephen Anthony Walsh, ‘Between the Arctic and the Adriatic: polar exploration, science and empire in the Habsburg monarchy’, PhD thesis, Harvard University, 2014, pp. 208–70.

25 Frank Greenaway, Science international: a history of the International Council of Scientific Unions, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1996, pp. 33–148.

26 Commission mixte de l’ionosphère: compte-rendu de la deuxième réunion tenue à Bruxelles du 4 au 6 Septembre 1950, Brussels: URSI, 1951, pp. 63–6.

27 ‘Proposal made in 1951 by the Mixed Commission on the Ionosphere for an International Polar Year in 1957–1958’, in Annals of the International Geophysical Year, vol. 2A, London: Pergamon Press, 1958, p. 70.

28 Stratton, F. J. M., ed., The sixth general assembly of the International Council of Scientific Unions held at Amsterdam October 1st to 3rd 1952, Cambridge: ICSU, 1953, p. 10.Google Scholar

29 National Archives of India, New Delhi, India (henceforth NAI), S. S. Bhatnagar Papers, file 8, Meghnad Saha et al., ‘The report of the Indian scientific mission of their visit to the United Kingdom, the United States of America and Canada during 1944–45’, February 1946. On geophysics, see Shindell, Matthew, ‘Geophysics’, in Montgomery, Georgina and Largent, Mark, eds., A companion to the history of American science, Malden, MA: John Wiley & Sons, 2016, pp. 120–33.Google Scholar

30 NAI, Ministry of Education, SR-2_1953_NA_F-22(1)_53, Deputy Director of Tata Institute to T. W. Gonsalves, 12 June 1953.

31 Howkins, Adrian, ‘Reluctant collaborators: Argentina and Chile in Antarctica during the International Geophysical Year, 1957–58’, Journal of Historical Geography, 34, 2008, pp. 596617.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

32 NAAS, C3830 C34/1 Part 1, E. G. Bowen to F. W. G. White, 27 October 1952.

33 See correspondence in National Archives and Records Administration, College Park, MD, USA (henceforth NARA), 1955–59 Central Decimal File, box 1651, folder 3.

34 Leary, William and LeSchack, Leonard, Project COLDFEET: secret mission to a Soviet ice station, Annapolis, MD: Naval Institute Press, 1996, pp. 728Google Scholar; Siddiqi, Asif, The rockets’ red glare: spaceflight and the Soviet imagination, 1857–1957, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2010, pp. 196289.Google Scholar

35 Graham, Loren, Science in Russia and the Soviet Union: a short history, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1993, pp. 137206Google Scholar; Ivanov, Konstantin, ‘Science after Stalin: forging a new image of Soviet science’, Science in Context, 15, 2, 2002, pp. 317–38.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

36 Zuoyue Wang and Jiuchen Zhang, ‘China and the International Geophysical Year’, in Launius, DeVorkin, and Fleming, Globalizing polar science, pp. 144–9.

37 Bulkeley, Rip, ‘Aspects of the Soviet IGY’, Russian Journal of Earth Sciences, 10, ES 1003, 2008, pp. 117.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

38 For example, Archiv der Berlin-Brandenburgischen Akademie der Wissenschaften, Berlin, Germany, Akademieleitung, 1945–1968, file 500, Günther Rienäcker, ‘Mitteilung eines Beschlusses des Praesidiums’, 5 December 1961.

39 Archivo General de la Nación, Montevideo, Uruguay, Ministerio de Instrucción Pública, file 634, Germán Barbato and Hugo Frigerio Herrán to Clemente Ruggia, 12 September 1956.

40 Schweizerisches Bundesarchiv, Bern, Switzerland, E6100B#1970/298#106*, Markus Feldmann and Charles Oser, ‘Botschaft des Bundesrates an die Bundesversammlung über die Bewilligung eines Beitrages für die Beteiligung der Schweiz am “Internationalen Geophysikalischen Jahr 1957–1958”’, 11 June 1956.

41 The National Archives, Kew, London, UK, AIR 2/14174, Manuel Maldonado-Kordell, ‘El Año Geofisico Internacional y la VIII reunión de consulta sobre cartografia del Instituto Panamericano de Geografia e Historia, La Habana, Cuba, Febrero 12–21, 1958’.

42 Barton Worthington, Edgar, Science in the development of Africa: a review of the contribution of physical and biological knowledge south of the Sahara, London: Commission for Technical Co-operation in Africa South of the Sahara, 1958, pp. 4958.Google Scholar

43 Archive for Contemporary Affairs, Bloemfontein, Republic of South Africa, E. H. Louw Papers, file 44, Eric Louw, ‘Address by the Minister of Economic Affairs (the Honourable Eric H. Louw) on the occasion of the opening of the meeting of the Scientific Council for Africa, South of the Sahara’, 20 September 1954.

44 National Archives and Records Service of South Africa, Pretoria, Republic of South Africa (henceforth NARSSA), BLO 611 PS31/13, ‘Report on first 12 months of International Geophysical Year in Ghana’, July 1958.

45 Luther Evans, ‘Preface’, in Werner Buedeler, The International Geophysical Year, Paris: UNESCO, 1957, p. 4; ‘The new portrait of our planet’, Life, 7 November 1960, p. 75.

46 University of Toronto Archives, Toronto, Canada, B1993-0050, box 22, folder: ‘IUGG delegates & papers’, K. R. Ramanathan, ‘Presidential address’, 3 September 1957.

47 Hobbes, Thomas, Leviathan, ed. Tuck, Richard, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1996, p. 9.Google Scholar

48 Davis McDaid, Jennifer, ‘“How a one-legged rebel lives”: confederate veterans and artificial limbs in Virginia’, in Ott, Katherine, Serlin, David, and Mihm, Stephen, eds., Artificial parts, practical lives: modern histories of prosthetics, New York: New York University Press, 2002, pp. 119–43.Google Scholar

49 María Chesterton, Bridget and Yang, Timothy, ‘The global origins of a “Paraguayan” sweetener: ka’a he’e and stevia in the twentieth century’, Journal of World History 27, 2, 2016, pp. 256–8.Google Scholar

50 Benjamin, Walter, ‘The work of art in the age of mechanical reproduction’, in Illuminations, New York: Mariner Books, 2019, pp. 166–95Google Scholar; Heidegger, Martin, The question concerning technology and other essays, New York: Garland Publishing, 1977.Google Scholar

51 Arendt, Hannah, Totalitarianism: part three of the origins of totalitarianism, New York: Harcourt, 1976, pp. 51, 60.Google Scholar

52 Arendt, Human condition, pp. 1–6.

53 Bartlett, James, ‘Projection of artificial meteor trails on the Moon’, Science, 107, 2771, 1948, pp. 141–2CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Report of the Superintendent of the Coast and Geodetic Survey, Washington, DC: Government Printing Office, 1902, p. 85.

54 Harper, Kristine, Make it rain: state control of the atmosphere in twentieth-century America, Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press, 2017, pp. 87164.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

55 NARA, RG 330, Entry UD UP 23, box 1, folder: ‘G & G numbered papers’, ‘Report of the Ad Hoc Committee for Review of R&D Proposal for Operation Greenhouse’, c. December 1949.

56 Fenner Archives of the Australian Academy of Science, Canberra, Australia (henceforth FAAAS), MS053, box 1, folder 1/1, Sydney Chapman, ‘The International Geophysical Year, 1957/8’, September 1952.

57 ‘Reports on CSAGI disciplines’, in Annals of the International Geophysical Year, pp. 4–15.

58 Neufeld, Michael, Spaceflight: a concise history, Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2018, pp. 142–6.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

59 Tuzo Wilson, J., IGY: the year of the new moons, New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1961.Google Scholar

60 Archives diplomatiques, La Courneuve, France, 372QO/640, ‘Discours de N. Khrouchtchev’, 22 January 1958; Launius, Roger, Logsdon, John, and Smith, Robert, eds., Reconsidering Sputnik: forty years since the Soviet satellite, Amsterdam: Harwood Academic Publishers, 2000, pp. 43116.Google Scholar

61 Suri, Jeremi, Power and protest: global revolution and the rise of détente, Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2005, p. 67.Google Scholar

62 Harvey, Brian, The Chinese space programme: from conception to future capabilities, New York: John Wiley & Sons, 1998, p. 6.Google Scholar

63 FAAAS, box 951, folder: ‘Soviet Information Bureau’, ‘For the good of mankind’, 21 January 1959.

64 National Physical Laboratory, New Delhi, India, K. S. Krishnan Papers, ‘The use of harmless radioactive tracer materials for the study of circulation and mixing in the atmosphere and ocean’ c. October 1955.

65 Weart, Spencer, Nuclear fear: a history, Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1988, pp. 1776.Google Scholar

66 Lapp, R. E., ‘Atomic bomb explosions: effects on an American city’, Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, 4, 2, 1948, pp. 4954.CrossRefGoogle Scholar See also Masco, Joseph, ‘The age of fallout’, History of the Present, 5, 2, 2015, pp. 137–68.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

67 Glasstone, Samuel, ed., The effects of atomic weapons, Washington, DC: Government Printing Office, 1950, pp. 33–7Google Scholar; Gerstell, Richard, How to survive an atomic bomb, Washington, DC: Combat Forces Press, 1950, pp. 1426.Google Scholar

68 Higuchi, Toshihiro, ‘An environmental origin of antinuclear activism in Japan, 1954–1963: the politics of risk, the government, and the grassroots movement’, Peace & Change, 33, 3, 2008, pp. 333–66CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Hamblin, Jacob and Richards, Linda, ‘Beyond the Lucky Dragon: Japanese scientists and fallout discourse in the 1950s’, Historia Scientiarum, 25, 1, 2015, pp. 3656.Google Scholar

69 Boudia, Soraya, ‘Global regulation: controlling and accepting radioactivity risks’, History and Technology, 23, 2007, pp. 389406.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

70 National Academy of Sciences, Washington, DC, USA (henceforth NAS), International Geophysical Year 10.6, folder: ‘Nuclear radiation: Utrecht agenda & background material 1956–1957’, ‘Nuclear radiation programme’, September 1956. See Hamblin, Jacob, Poison in the well: radioactive waste in the oceans at the dawn of the nuclear age, New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press, 2008, pp. 99142.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

71 Rodger Fleming, James, Inventing atmospheric science: Bjerknes, Rossby, Wexler, and the foundations of modern meteorology, Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2016, pp. 172–9.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

72 A. Khrgian, ‘Some problems in processing IGY materials’, Soviet-Bloc IGY Translations, 6 January 1959, pp. 22–3. For context, see Jonathan Oldfield, ‘Imagining climates past, present, and future: Soviet contributions to the science of anthropogenic climate change, 1953–1991’, Journal of Historical Geography, 60, 2018, pp. 41–51.

73 Callendar, Guy, ‘The artificial production of carbon dioxide and its influence on temperature’, Quarterly Journal of the Royal Meteorological Society, 64, 275, 1938, pp. 223–37.CrossRefGoogle Scholar See also Weart, Spencer, The discovery of global warming, Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2008, pp. 118CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Fleming, James, The Callendar effect: the life and work of Guy Stewart Callendar (1898–1964), Boston, MA: American Meteorological Society, 2007, pp. 6587.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

74 Bohn, Maria, ‘Concentrating on CO2: the Scandinavian Arctic measurements’, Osiris, 26, 1, 2011, pp. 165–79CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed; Doel, Ronald et al., ‘Strategic Arctic science: national interests in building natural knowledge: interwar era through the Cold War’, Journal of Historical Geography, 44, 2014, pp. 6080.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

75 ‘The fourth meeting of the CSAGI (Barcelona, 10–15 September 1956)’, in Annals of the International Geophysical Year, pp. 328, 350.

76 Dwight D. Eisenhower Presidential Library, Abilene, Kansas, USA (henceforth DDEPL), Dwight D. Eisenhower, White House Office, National Security Council Staff: Papers, 1948–61, OCB Central File Series, box 11, folder: OCB 000.91 (1), ‘Statement of the Meteorological Society of Japan concerning hydrogen bomb’, 20 May 1954.

77 Nehru Memorial Museum and Library, New Delhi, India, 190 (LLXX) D. S. Kothari, folder 9, Jawaharlal Nehru, ‘Prime Minister’s secretariat’, 21 March 1955; Vohra, K. G., Shirvaikar, V. V., and Rangarajan, C., ‘Radioactive fallout measurements made in India during 1956–57’, Indian Journal of Meteorology and Geophysics, 9, 1958, pp. 332–40.Google Scholar

78 Scripps Institution of Oceanography Archives, La Jolla, California, USA (henceforth SIO), SIO Subject Files 1890–1982, box 75, folder 19, Georges Laclavère to Participants of the Göteborg meeting of the Working Group on Oceanography 15–17 January 1957.

79 Revelle, Roger, ‘Testimony before the House Committee on Appropriations, February 8, 1956’, in Howe, Joshua, ed., Making climate change history: documents from global warming’s past, Seattle, WA: University of Washington Press, 2017, pp. 62–3.Google Scholar

80 Lloyd Norman, ‘Flumes seen warming Arctic seas’, Washington Post, 19 March 1956; ‘One big greenhouse’, Time, 28 May 1956.

81 Dufek, George, Through the frozen frontier: the exploration of Antarctica, Leicester: Brockhampton Press , 1960, pp. 171–86.Google Scholar

82 Nuclear Testing Archive, Las Vegas, Nevada, USA (henceforth NTA), 0059492, ‘The Argus experiment’, 29 July 1958.

83 NTA, 0304398, James Killian Jr, ‘Memorandum for the President’, 3 November 1958.

84 DDEPL, Dwight D. Eisenhower, Records as President (White House Central Files), Confidential File, box 44, folder: ‘National Aeronautics and Space Administration (4)’, Robert Piland to James Killian Jr, 12 November 1958.

85 Mundey, Lisa, ‘The civilianization of a nuclear weapon effects test: the ARGUS operation’, Historical Studies in the Natural Sciences, 42, 4, 2012, pp. 283321.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

86 IGY satellite report series, no. 9, Washington, DC: National Academy of Sciences, 1959.

87 Edwards, Paul, A vast machine: computer models, climate data, and the politics of global warming, Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2010, pp. 812.Google Scholar

88 Aronova, Elena, ‘Geophysical datascapes of the Cold War: politics and practices of the World Data Centers in the 1950s and 1960s’, Osiris, 32, 2017, pp. 307–27.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

89 McCray, Patrick, Keep watching the skies! The story of Operation Moonwatch and the dawn of the Space Age, Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2008, pp. 58164.Google Scholar

90 Archivo del Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores y Culto, Buenos Aires, Argentina, fond 79, box 11, folder: 1956 27, Enrique Gaviola to Francisco Bello, 5 September 1956.

91 NARSSA, SAB HEN_3315_505/3/2_2 vol. 1, Minister van Finansies, ‘Radiowaarnemings van die Aard-Satelliete (Radio observations of the Earth satellites)’, c. October 1957.

92 National Archives of Australia, Canberra, Australia (henceforth NAAC), A2031 264/1956, Defence Committee, ‘International Geophysical Year’, December 1956.

93 Smithsonian Institution Archives, Washington, DC, USA, SAO Satellite Tracking, box 23, folder: ‘Japan – administration’, Masasi Miyadi to Fred Whipple, 7 February 1957.

94 Masevich, Alla, Zvezdy i sputniki v moyey zhizni (Stars and satellites in my life), Moscow: Institute of Astronomy, 2007, pp. 48–9.Google Scholar

95 NAS, International Geophysical Year Records Group, series 10.1, folder: ‘CSAGI participating countries India 1956–1959’, Hugh Odishaw to A. P. Mitra, 26 March 1958.

96 Masevich, A. G. and Lozinskii, A. M, ‘Optical tracking methods for the first artificial satellites’, Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific, 70, 412, 1958, pp. 81–2.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

97 Herran, Néstor, ‘“Unscare” and conceal: the United Nations Scientific Committee on the Effects of Atomic Radiation and the origin of international radiation monitoring’, in Turchetti, Simone and Roberts, Peder, eds., The surveillance imperative: geosciences during the Cold War and beyond, New York: Palgrave, 2014, pp. 71–2.Google Scholar

98 FAAAS, box 1, folder 2/2, J. P. Baxter to Hugh Webster, 3 May 1957; ‘Global fallout in Australia during the period 26 November 1956 to 31 December 1957’, Australian Journal of Science, 21, 1, 1958, pp. 8–9.

99 Aronova, ‘Geophysical datascapes’, p. 315.

100 NAS, International Geophysical Year 10.6, folder: ‘Nuclear radiation: Utrecht agenda & background material 1956–1957’, ‘Ad hoc meeting Radioactivity Panel’, 14 December 1956.

101 United Nations Archives, New York, S-0262-0017-10, ‘Letter received from the representative of the United States to the United Nations offering technical assistance in the measurement of radioactive fallout’, 13 June 1956.

102 NAS, International Geophysical Year 10.6, folder: ‘Nuclear radiation: Utrecht agenda & background material 1956–1957’, Eizo Tajima to Lester Machta, 18 December 1956.

103 Summary of the observation results for airborne radioactivity in the world during IGY-IGC, Tokyo: Science Council of Japan, 1962, p. 5.

104 Machta, Lester, ‘The nuclear radiation program of the International Geophysical Year’, in Annals of the International Geophysical Year, vol. 32, Oxford: Pergamon Press, 1964, p. 130.Google Scholar

105 Feely, Herbert and Spar, Jerome, ‘Tungsten-185 from nuclear bomb tests as a tracer for stratospheric meteorology’, Nature, 188, 4756, 1960, pp. 1062–4.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

106 NAAC, A452 1958/1685, H. D. Anderson, ‘Japanese I.G.Y. survey vessels’, 7 August 1958.

107 Neumann, Georg, ‘The Fourth Annual Conference in Atmospheric Chemistry, May 20–22, 1957’, Tellus, 10, 1, 1958, p. 166.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

108 SIO, Norris Watson Rakestraw Papers, box 1, folder 18, Charles Keeling, ‘Preliminary results of the atmospheric carbon dioxide abundances program prepared for presentation at the IGY meetings in Moscow USSR’, 3 July 1958.

109 NAAS, C3830 C34/1 Part 3, Carl Rossby to E. G. Bowen, 3 October 1956.

110 Revelle, Roger and Suess, Hans, ‘Carbon dioxide exchange between atmosphere and ocean and the question of an increase of atmospheric CO2 during the past decades’, Tellus, 9, 1, 1957, p. 18.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

111 Miller, Clark, ‘Scientific internationalism in American foreign policy: the case of meteorology, 1947–1958’, in Miller, Clark and Edwards, Paul, eds., Changing the atmosphere: expert knowledge and environmental governance, Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2001, pp. 167218.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

112 SIO, Charles David Keeling Papers (2003–18), box 8, folder 8, Charles Keeling to Paul Humphrey, 5 July 1957.

113 SIO, Norris Watson Rakestraw Papers, box 1, folder 15, ‘Atmospheric carbon dioxide content at various localities including Antarctic Ocean’, 1959.

114 SIO, James Arnold Papers, box 37, folder 7, ‘Carbon dioxide abundances and radio-chemistry analysis program, January–March 1957’.

115 Howe, Joshua, Behind the curve: science and the politics of global warming, Seattle, WA: University of Washington Press, 2014, pp. 1643.Google Scholar

116 Scholander, P. F., Kanwisher, John, and Nutt, D. C., ‘Gases in icebergs’, Science, 123, 3186, 1956, pp. 104–5.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed

117 Coachman, L. K., Hemmingsen, E., and Scholander, P. F., ‘Gas enclosures in a temperate glacier’, Tellus, 8, 4, 1956, pp. 415–23.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

118 SIO, Per Fredrik Scholander Papers, box 6, David Nutt, Per Scholander, Lawrence Coachman, and Willi Dansgaard, ‘Arctic Institute Greenland expedition 1958 field report’, 1 September 1958.

119 SIO, Per Fredrik Scholander Papers, box 6, D. C. Nutt to IGY DC Program Officer, 22 April 1958; Martin-Nielsen, Janet, ‘Security and the nation: glaciology in early Cold War Greenland’, in Doel, Ronald, Harper, Kristine, and Heymann, Matthias, eds., Exploring Greenland: Cold War science and technology on ice, New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2016, pp. 99118.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

120 Antonello, Alessandro and Carey, Mark, ‘Ice cores and the temporalities of the global environment’, Environmental Humanities, 9, 2, 2017, pp. 181203.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

121 Conway, Erik, Atmospheric science at NASA: a history, Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2008, pp. 3993Google Scholar; Angelina Callahan, ‘Satellite meteorology in the Cold War era: scientific coalitions and international leadership 1946–1964’, PhD thesis, Georgia Institute of Technology, 2013, pp. 187–252.

122 Mastny, Vojtech, ‘The 1963 Nuclear Test Ban Treaty: a missed opportunity for détente?Journal of Cold War Studies, 10, 1, 2008, pp. 325CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Barth, Kai-Henrik, ‘The politics of seismology: nuclear testing, arms control, and the transformation of a discipline’, Social Studies of Science, 33, 5, 2003, pp. 743–81.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

123 Lutts, Ralph, ‘Chemical fallout: Rachel Carson’s Silent Spring, radioactive fallout, and the environmental movement’, Environmental Review, 9, 3, 1985, pp. 210–25Google ScholarPubMed; Hamblin, Poison in the well, pp. 219–51; Masco, Joseph, ‘Bad weather: on planetary crisis’, Social Studies of Science, 40, 1, 2010, pp. 740CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Weart, Nuclear fear, pp. 273–390.

124 Ward, Barbara and Dubos, René, Only one Earth: the care and maintenance of a small planet, New York: Penguin, 1972, p. 267.Google Scholar See Macekura, Stephen, Of limits and growth: the rise of global sustainable development in the twentieth century, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2015, pp. 91136.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

125 Warde et al., The environment, p. 135.

126 Aronova, Elena, Baker, Karen, and Oreskes, Naomi, ‘Big science and big data in biology: from the International Geophysical Year through the International Biological Program to the Long-Term Ecological Research Program, 1957–present’, Historical Studies in the Natural Sciences, 40, 2, 2010, pp. 183224CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Vance, Tiffany and Doel, Ronald, ‘Graphical methods and Cold War scientific practice: the Stommel diagram’s intriguing journey from the physical to the biological environmental sciences’, Historical Studies in the Natural Sciences, 40, 1, 2010, pp. 147CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed; Oreskes, Naomi, ‘Changing the mission: from the Cold War to climate change’, in Oreskes, Naomi and Krige, John, eds., Science and technology in the global Cold War, Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2014, pp. 141–87Google Scholar; Launius, Roger, ‘“We will learn more about the Earth by leaving it than by remaining on it”: NASA and the forming of an earth science discipline in the 1960s’, in Heinze, Thomas and Münch, Richard, eds., Innovation in Science and organizational renewal: historical and sociological perspectives, New York: Palgrave, 2016, pp. 211–42.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

127 Lewis, Simon and Maslin, Mark, ‘Defining the Anthropocene’, Nature, 519, 7542, 2015, pp. 171–80CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed; Zalasiewicz, Jan et al., ‘Colonization of the Americas, “Little Ice Age” climate, and bomb-produced carbon: their role in defining the Anthropocene’, Anthropocene Review, 2, 2, 2015, pp. 117–27.Google Scholar

128 NAS, International Geophysical Year Records Group, series 16.1, folder: ‘US Air Force Scientific Advisory Board Geophysics Research Panel 1955–1959’, Joseph Kaplan to James Doolittle, 16 July 1956.

129 NTA, 0311447, ‘Argus’, c. early 1959.

130 Dörries, Matthias, ‘The politics of atmospheric sciences: “nuclear winter” and global climate change’, Osiris, 26, 1, 2011, pp. 198223CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed; Badash, Lawrence, A nuclear winter’s tale: science and politics in the 1980s, Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2009, pp. 4962.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

131 Oreskes, Naomi, Merchants of doubt: how a handful of scientists obscured the truth on issues from tobacco smoke to global warming, New York: Bloomsbury Publishing, 2010, pp. 169215Google Scholar; Hamblin, Arming Mother Nature, pp. 217–51.

132 Arendt, Human condition, p. 3.