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Lake Kivu: The ticking time bomb that could one day explode and unleash a massive, deadly gas cloud


QUICK FACTS

Name: Lake Kivu

Location: East-central Africa, straddling Rwanda and Congo

Coordinates: -1.914891119034228, 29.198902180922207

Why it’s incredible: The lake contains huge amounts of explosive carbon dioxide and methane.

Lake Kivu is a giant body of water that is so saturated with carbon dioxide (CO2) and methane at its depths it could explode without warning. Two other lakes in Africa have a similarly deadly chemistry — lakes Nyos and Monoun in Cameroon — which have both exploded in the past 40 years, killing a total of nearly 1,800 people and thousands of animals.

Lake Kivu is one of the African Great Lakes that straddle a tectonic plate boundary called the East African Rift. In the rift, the Somalian tectonic plate is drifting eastward and away from the rest of the continent on the Nubian plate. (The Somalian plate is also known as the Somali plate, and the Nubian plate is also sometimes called the African plate.) This movement leads to volcanic and seismic activity in the region, which in turn funnels gases from deep inside Earth’s crust to the surface — and into Lake Kivu’s depths.

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