On the night of August 21, 1986, people in the villages around Lake Nyos went to sleep expecting an ordinary morning. Many never woke up. By sunrise, more than 1,800 people and thousands of animals lay dead across the countryside, with no signs of violence, disease, or struggle. What happened at Lake Nyos defied explanation. Survivors described a strange stillness, an absence of sound, and entire communities silenced in a matter of hours. As scientists raced to understand the catastrophe, they uncovered a rare and deadly natural phenomenon hidden beneath the lake itself.