For a lake to undergo a limnic eruption, the water must be nearly
saturated with gas. was the primary component in the two observed cases, Lake Nyos and Lake Monoun. In Lake Kivu's case, scientists, including lake physicist Alfred Johny Wüest, were also concerned about the concentrations of
methane. may originate from
volcanic gas emitted from under the lake, or from decomposition of organic material. Before a lake becomes saturated, it behaves like an unopened
carbonated soft drink: the is
dissolved in the water. In both lakes and soft drinks, dissolves much more readily at higher
pressure due to
Henry's law. When the pressure is released, the comes out of
solution as bubbles of gas, which rise to the surface. also dissolves more readily in cooler water, so very deep lakes can dissolve very large amounts of since pressure increases, and
temperature decreases, with depth. A small increase in water temperature can lead to the release of a large amount of . Once a lake is saturated, it is very unstable but a trigger is needed to actually set off an eruption. In the case of the 1986 Lake Nyos eruption,
landslides were the suspected triggers, but a volcanic eruption, an
earthquake, or even
wind and
rain storms can be potential triggers. Limnic eruptions can also be caused by gradual gas saturation at specific depths triggering spontaneous gas development. Regardless of cause, the trigger pushes gas-saturated water higher in the lake, where the reduced pressure is insufficient to keep gas in solution. The
buoyancy from the resulting bubbles lifts the water even higher, releasing yet more bubbles. This process forms a column of gas, at which point the water at the bottom is pulled up by
suction, and it too loses in a runaway process. This eruption discharges the gas into the air and can displace enough water to form a
tsunami. Limnic eruptions are exceptionally rare for several reasons. First, a source must exist; regions with volcanic activity are most at risk. Second, the vast majority of lakes are
holomictic (their layers mix regularly), preventing a buildup of dissolved gases. Only
meromictic lakes are
stratified, allowing to remain dissolved. It is estimated only one meromictic lake exists for every 1,000 holomictic lakes. Finally, a lake must be very deep in order to have sufficiently pressurized water that can dissolve large amounts of . == Consequences ==