A reporter who visited the site after the disaster describes what he learned and saw. From his telling:
Survivors of the disaster recounted that at about 9pm on Thursday August 21, 1986, there was a powerful explosion in the lake after villagers had complained it had been boiling for five days. About three minutes after explosion, a violent wind started blowing from the lake to the south, invading the village of Fang, Chah, lower Nyos and Subum. The gas they said, was too hot and suffocated all living things. All those affected had burns on their bodies.
Here are some survivor stories from the Smithsonian Magazine.
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.
Here's the Wikipedia article.
All lock and dams on the Ohio River have built in blocks and huge rocks below the dams to aerate the water. That is why below the dams you always see turbulent water. During summer droughts the Ohio river does belch gases. The government always tries to keep the water flowing to keep the water aerated. Towboat and motorboat props help raise the gases to the surface.
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