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Earth from Space: The shrinking Aral Sea by europeanspaceagency

© europeanspaceagency, all rights reserved.

Earth from Space: The shrinking Aral Sea

The Copernicus Sentinel-2 mission shows us what is left of the Aral Sea, once the fourth largest lake in the world.

Straddling the border between Kazakhstan in the north and Uzbekistan in the south, the Aral Sea was once a large inland water body in Central Asia. In 1960, the lake covered an area of about 68 000 sq km – twice the size of Belgium.

Before the 1950s, the Syr Darya and the Amu Darya rivers carried fresh mountain water into this temperate oasis, situated in a mostly arid region. However, in the 1960s, the rivers were diverted to irrigate cotton fields across the region and since then the Aral Sea has shrunk dramatically.

By the end of the 1980s, the Aral Sea had split into two bodies of water – the Large Aral shared by Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan, and a smaller almost unconnected lake to the north, the Small Aral, in Kazakhstan. By 2000, the Large Aral had further split into two.

In this image from 18 March 2025, we can see how the western lobe has reduced substantially, while the eastern lobe, still visible in this image from 2006, has virtually dried up. As the Aral Sea evaporated, it left behind a zone of dry, salty terrain. This appears in the image as a whitish area over the former lakebed, now the Aralkum Desert, Earth’s youngest desert.

The retreat of the waters devastated the area’s thriving fishing industry and altered the regional microclimate. Violent sandstorms have now become an annual occurrence, transporting tonnes of salt and sand from the dried-up lakebed across hundreds of kilometres. This causes severe health problems for the local population and makes regional winters colder and summers hotter.

At the northern tip of the western half of the Large Aral, we can spot the remnant of what appeared as an emerald green heart-shaped body of water in 2019. This water body is also retreating and is likely to disappear soon.

The ice-covered waters of the Small Aral Sea can be seen in the upper part of the image. While the lake’s entire southern section is expected to soon dry out completely, the Small Aral Sea is the focus of international preservation efforts.

The two brown straight lines at the southeastern tip of Small Aral indicate the Kok-Aral dike, which was constructed to prevent water flowing into the southern section of the lake and to stabilise the water level and salinity in the northern section. Since its completion in 2005, the water level has risen in the northern section by an average of 4 m.

The drying up of the Aral Sea is a striking example of long-term changes – both natural and linked to human activity – that can be tracked by satellites to provide data to help decision-making.

Credits: contains modified Copernicus Sentinel data (2025), processed by ESA, CC BY-SA 3.0 IGO

Crossing the Amu Darya by geogblog2

© geogblog2, all rights reserved.

Crossing the Amu Darya

Turkmenabat, Turkmenistan 10 Aug 2024

Image (5) by siemacotam

© siemacotam, all rights reserved.

Image (5)

Aral Sea and the Aralkum desert + whatever is left of the Amu Darya, October 2024

Image (7) by siemacotam

© siemacotam, all rights reserved.

Image (7)

Aral Sea and the Aralkum desert + whatever is left of the Amu Darya, October 2024

Amu Darya by Croydon Clicker

Available under a Creative Commons by-nd license

Amu Darya

The Amu Darya river here marks the border between Uzbekistan and Turkmenistan. Its source is glaciers from the Hindu Kush. It used to flow into the Aral Sea but that has dried up and it basically disappears these days into the desert after being depleted for agricultural use.

Amudarya by Leo Koolhoven

© Leo Koolhoven, all rights reserved.

Amudarya

Map of the Kokand Khanate and the Upper Reaches of the Amu Darya; 1872 by Lvovsky

Released to the public domain

Map of the Kokand Khanate and the Upper Reaches of the Amu Darya; 1872

Map of the Kokand Khanate and the Upper Reaches of the Amu Darya [Maps] / based on existing information, own routes, and inquiries compiled by A. P. Fedchenko. - 1 : 2,100,000, 21 km in 1 cm. - Supplemented and printed at the cartographic establishments of the Main Staff. - [Saint Petersburg], 1872. - 1 sheet: two-color, 1 sheet. - 15 p., text + appendix (15 p.).

Title of the appendix: Explanatory note to the map of the Kokand Khanate and adjacent countries. Contents: Hydrography in accordance with the purpose of the map; Relief - by contours; Settlements are given with emphasis on significance; Communication routes - postal roads with stations, other roads, passes.

*

Карта Коканского ханства и верховьев Аму-Дарьи, 1872

Карта Коканского ханства и верховьев Аму-Дарьи [Карты] / на основании существующих сведений, собственных маршрутов и распросов составил А. П. Федченко. - 1: 2 100 000, 21 км в 1 см. - Дополнено и печатано в картогр. заведений Глав. Штаба. - [Санкт-Петербург], 1872. - 1 л. : двухкрас., 1 кор. - 15 с., текст + прил. (15 с.).

Загл. прил.: Объяснительная заметка к карте Коканского ханства прилежащих стран. Содерж.: Гидрография в соответствии с назнаечнием карты; Рельеф - горизонталями; Насел. пункты даны с выделением по значению; Пути сообщения - почтовые дороги со станциями, прочие дороги, перевалы.

Aral'sk, Kazakhstan was formerly a Soviet Union fishing port and harbor city on the banks of the Aral Sea. The diversion of the rivers flowing into it for Soviet irrigation projects dried it up, resulting in environmental devastation and economic hardship by Richard Forensky

© Richard Forensky, all rights reserved.

Aral'sk, Kazakhstan was formerly a Soviet Union fishing port and harbor city on the banks of the Aral Sea. The diversion of the rivers flowing into it for Soviet irrigation projects dried it up, resulting in environmental devastation and economic hardship

The most colorful spot in the entire town of Aral'sk, Kazakhstan. by Richard Forensky

© Richard Forensky, all rights reserved.

The most colorful spot in the entire town of Aral'sk, Kazakhstan.

Aral'sk, Kazakhstan was formerly a Soviet Union fishing port and harbor city on the banks of the Aral Sea. The diversion of the rivers flowing into it for Soviet irrigation projects dried it up, resulting in environmental devastation and economic hardship by Richard Forensky

© Richard Forensky, all rights reserved.

Aral'sk, Kazakhstan was formerly a Soviet Union fishing port and harbor city on the banks of the Aral Sea. The diversion of the rivers flowing into it for Soviet irrigation projects dried it up, resulting in environmental devastation and economic hardship

Aral'sk, Kazakhstan was formerly a Soviet Union fishing port and harbor city on the banks of the Aral Sea. The diversion of the rivers flowing into it for Soviet irrigation projects dried it up, resulting in environmental devastation and economic hardship by Richard Forensky

© Richard Forensky, all rights reserved.

Aral'sk, Kazakhstan was formerly a Soviet Union fishing port and harbor city on the banks of the Aral Sea. The diversion of the rivers flowing into it for Soviet irrigation projects dried it up, resulting in environmental devastation and economic hardship

The Aralkum Desert and Aral Sea basin, Kazakhstan/Uzbekistan. by Richard Forensky

© Richard Forensky, all rights reserved.

The Aralkum Desert and Aral Sea basin, Kazakhstan/Uzbekistan.

Aral'sk, Kazakhstan was formerly a Soviet Union fishing port and harbor city on the banks of the Aral Sea. The diversion of the rivers flowing into it for Soviet irrigation projects dried it up, resulting in environmental devastation and economic hardship by Richard Forensky

© Richard Forensky, all rights reserved.

Aral'sk, Kazakhstan was formerly a Soviet Union fishing port and harbor city on the banks of the Aral Sea. The diversion of the rivers flowing into it for Soviet irrigation projects dried it up, resulting in environmental devastation and economic hardship

Aral'sk, Kazakhstan was formerly a Soviet Union fishing port and harbor city on the banks of the Aral Sea. The diversion of the rivers flowing into it for Soviet irrigation projects dried it up, resulting in environmental devastation and economic hardship by Richard Forensky

© Richard Forensky, all rights reserved.

Aral'sk, Kazakhstan was formerly a Soviet Union fishing port and harbor city on the banks of the Aral Sea. The diversion of the rivers flowing into it for Soviet irrigation projects dried it up, resulting in environmental devastation and economic hardship

The Zhalanash village in the Aral Sea region. by Richard Forensky

© Richard Forensky, all rights reserved.

The Zhalanash village in the Aral Sea region.

The Aralkum Desert and Aral Sea basin, Kazakhstan/Uzbekistan. by Richard Forensky

© Richard Forensky, all rights reserved.

The Aralkum Desert and Aral Sea basin, Kazakhstan/Uzbekistan.

Ship Cemetery, Zhalanash, Kazakhstan - Previously a fishing village on the Aral Sea, Zhalanash now lies kilometers from its shores with stranded boats lying in ruin from the Aral Sea disappearance. by Richard Forensky

© Richard Forensky, all rights reserved.

Ship Cemetery, Zhalanash, Kazakhstan - Previously a fishing village on the Aral Sea, Zhalanash now lies kilometers from its shores with stranded boats lying in ruin from the Aral Sea disappearance.

Aral'sk, Kazakhstan was formerly a Soviet Union fishing port and harbor city on the banks of the Aral Sea. The diversion of the rivers flowing into it for Soviet irrigation projects dried it up, resulting in environmental devastation and economic hardship by Richard Forensky

© Richard Forensky, all rights reserved.

Aral'sk, Kazakhstan was formerly a Soviet Union fishing port and harbor city on the banks of the Aral Sea. The diversion of the rivers flowing into it for Soviet irrigation projects dried it up, resulting in environmental devastation and economic hardship

The Zhalanash village in the Aral Sea region. by Richard Forensky

© Richard Forensky, all rights reserved.

The Zhalanash village in the Aral Sea region.

The Aralkum Desert and Aral Sea basin, Kazakhstan/Uzbekistan. by Richard Forensky

© Richard Forensky, all rights reserved.

The Aralkum Desert and Aral Sea basin, Kazakhstan/Uzbekistan.