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Sunday, December 01, 2019
18 comments:
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which part of Africa was that?
ReplyDeleteAny ideal BVs
Cameroun
DeleteAs in eeee, Oyibo people sef, Africa, a whole continent but see the next post, mentioned the town and state.
DeleteCameroon. I remember reading from a magazine that year. A biker was headed to the village, he saw a recently dead antelope, he tied it in his bike. He then saw another bush meat still fresh, oga carry am till he saw many more dead animals, he dropped all his protein and entered the village where everyone was dead. I was young then but I felt the tragedy
DeleteCameroon
DeleteFact 1 is just terrible. Some might say nature was fighting back in some way.
DeleteFact 2 is the polar night effect. Polar days also occur, I'd like to experience one or the other under ideal conditions.
Elizabeth, there is no way to experience it in a good way. Yiu will feel depressed. Lack of sunlight affects people's mood in a negative way.
Delete@ fact one, really wonder what triggered it. Fact @ 2 just wow!!!
ReplyDeleteFact one, hnmmmm
ReplyDeleteFact two, wowww
@fact 1 Small lake in Africa.... , as if the location does not have a name or Africa is a city.
ReplyDeleteSo up till now no one know what trigger the 300,000 tons of carbon dioxide @fact1.
ReplyDeleteHmmm 67 days of total darkness. Is this for real. No sunlight just darkness through out. How do people cope with such?
Nature doesn't leave behind a textbook of why and how. Nature is still the boss, we are merely accessories, not the main event.
DeleteThere was a lovely horror movie called, 30 Days of Night, about a vampire colony descending on Barrow, Alaska as they prepare for the polar night event. Check out the movie if you like horror movies.
Sparks is right. Lake Nyos in Cameroun
ReplyDeleteLake Nyos. 1985. My friend lost her whole family.Isrealites came to test a chemical in the lake and the bribed the cameroon goverment. we were used as guinea pigs. They know exactly what happenend
ReplyDeleteYou are so right. That way lake Nyos in Cameroon. Th Cameroon government knows what game they played, allowing a different country to test their nuclear weapon.
DeleteDid scientists ever find out the root cause for such massive release of co2/ carbon dioxide by the lake? Whatever happened to the village/others after this horrendous incident? What preventative measures have been enacted since then by the government to make sure it doesn't happen again? Choi, one can only imagine the look on the faces of innocent children, women/men and livestock plus wild animals as they took their last breaths. Lord have mercy.
ReplyDeleteIn 1986, possibly as the result of a landslide, Lake Nyos suddenly emitted a large cloud of CO
ReplyDelete2, which suffocated 1,746 people[2] and 3,500 livestock in nearby towns and villages.[3][4] Though not completely unprecedented, it was the first known large-scale asphyxiation caused by a natural event.
Today, the lake also poses a threat because its natural wall is weakening. A geological tremor could cause this natural levée to give way, allowing water to rush into downstream villages all the way into Nigeria and allowing large amounts of carbon dioxide to escape.
ReplyDelete