Defusing Africa's Killer Lakes
In a remote region of Cameroon, an international team of scientists takes extraordinary steps to prevent the recurrence of a deadly natural disaster
- By Kevin Krajick
- Smithsonian magazine, September 2003, Subscribe
ON THE NIGHT OF THE APOCALYPSE, Ephriam Che was in his mud-brick house on a cliff above Nyos, a crater lake in the volcanic highlands of northwest Cameroon. A half-moon lit the water and the hills and valleys beyond. Around 9 p.m., Che, a subsistence farmer with four children, heard a rumbling that sounded like a rockslide. Then a strange white mist rose from the lake. He told his children that it looked as if rain were on the way and went to bed, feeling ill.
Down below, near the lake's shore, Halima Suley, a cowherd, and her four children had retired for the night. She also heard the rumbling; it sounded, she would recall, like "the shouting of many voices." Agreat wind roared through her extended family's small compound of thatched huts, and she promptly passed out—"like a dead person," she says.
At first light, Che headed downhill. Nyos, normally crystal blue, had turned a dull red. When he reached the lake's sole outlet, a waterfall cascading down from a low spot in the shore, he found the falls to be, uncharacteristically, dry. At this moment he noticed the silence; even the usual morning chorus of songbirds and insects was absent. So frightened his knees were shaking, he ran farther along the lake. Then he heard shrieking. It was Suley, who, in a frenzy of grief and horror, had torn off her clothing. "Ephriam!" she cried. "Come here! Why are these people lying here? Why won't they move again?"
Che tried to look away: scattered about lay the bodies of Suley's children, 31 other members of her family and their 400 cattle. Suley kept trying to shake her lifeless father awake. "On that day there were no flies on the dead," says Che. The flies were dead too.
He ran on downhill, to the village of Lower Nyos. There, nearly every one of the village's 1,000 residents was dead, including his parents, siblings, uncles and aunts. "I myself, I was crying, crying, crying," he says. It was August 21, 1986—the end of the world, or so Che believed at the time.
All told, some 1,800 people perished at LakeNyos. Many of the victims were found right where they'd normally be around 9 o'clock at night, suggesting they died on the spot. Bodies lay near cooking fires, clustered in doorways and in bed. Some people who had lain unconscious for more than a day finally awoke, saw their family members lying dead and then committed suicide.
Within days scientists from around the world converged on Nyos. At first, they assumed the long-dormant volcano under its crater had erupted, spewing out some kind of deadly fumes. Over months and years, however, the researchers uncovered a monstrous, far more insidious geologic disaster—one thought to exist only in myth. Even worse, they realized, the catastrophe could recur, at Nyos and at least one additional lake nearby. Since then, a small band of dedicated scientists has returned here repeatedly in an attempt to head off tragedy. Their methods, remarkably low-tech and inexpensive, may very well work. "We are anxious to protect the people there," says Gregory Tanyileke, a Cameroonian hydrologist who coordinates experts from Japan, the United States and Europe.
It took menearly 24 hours to fly from New York, via Paris, to Yaoundé, Cameroon's sprawling capital. There I met photographer Louise Gubb, but this was just the start of our journey. Most people in Cameroon, a poor equatorial country the size of California, are subsistence farmers, cultivating yams, beans and other staples by hand. In a nation with 200 or more ethnic groups, languages change every few miles. Islam, Christianity and animist cults mix and recombine in peaceful confusion.
Single Page 1 2 3 4 5 6 Next »
Subscribe now for more of Smithsonian's coverage on history, science and nature.









Comments (3)
I wonder if it's correct that the gas is "dissolved" if it can be released as a gas. A bigger problem with the article is confusing asphyxiation with carbon dioxide poisoning. Asphyxiation is caused by lack of oxygen. Carbon monoxide can cause asphyxiation because it has a higher affinity than oxygen for combining with haemoglobin, but elevated carbon dioxide cannot on its own cause asphyxiation if there is sufficient oxygen available. Carbon dioxide poisoning is more correctly described as hypercapnia (e.g. see this article http://www.pnas.org/content/108/40/16545.full relating to risks of carbon capture and storage).
Posted by Philip Machanick on January 8,2012 | 02:54 AM
Why of common sense was no autopsies performed?
Posted by Ryan on December 5,2009 | 09:27 PM
A very interesting story, and well written.
I have a point of disagreement with the theories put forth on what triggers the massive CO2 releases, however. The lakes named are meromictic and the bottom waters can stay still, and probably anaerobic, for centuries. In order for former tales of Nyos to have metamorphosed into myth, the period between cataclysmic releases must have been considerable. If that were true (quite a lengths of "if's", I admit), then the deep waters were not only fully saturated, but supersaturated. There comes a point when just an iota more of the highly pressurized CO2 will trigger the rest of the load.
I have read about this incident a number of times, and have decided that it is likely that the rockslide was triggered by the early stages of the explosion.
I think the solution manifested by safety teams was quite ingenious.
Posted by Parris ja Young on April 8,2009 | 07:53 PM