Abandoned fishing boats stranded by a vanishing sea. Image - Sebastian Kluger/Wikimedia Commons
Today for Throwback Thursday (#TBT) we’re checking out the Aral Sea, which is located in central Asia near Kazakhstan. This was one of the world’s largest saline lakes. In the 1960s that all began to change as rivers that fed the lake were diverted for Soviet irrigation projects to boost cotton production. Since then the lake has shrunk by some 70% or more, thought is has seen a little recovery due to a dam built to raise the level of the lake enough to support native fish once again. However, it may never return to its former glory unless massive changes are made to management of water from sources like the Amu Darya River. Since the 1960s, the Aral Sea has lost 90% of its source-water, which begins as snow in the Himalayas.
Google-powered Timelapse won’t take us all the way back to the 1960s, but it will allow us to see SIGNIFICANT change from 1984 – 2012. Go ahead and zoom in for a closer look... http://blog.skytruth.org/2014/05/timelapse-aral-sea.html
Today for Throwback Thursday (#TBT) we’re checking out the Aral Sea, which is located in central Asia near Kazakhstan. This was one of the world’s largest saline lakes. In the 1960s that all began to change as rivers that fed the lake were diverted for Soviet irrigation projects to boost cotton production. Since then the lake has shrunk by some 70% or more, thought is has seen a little recovery due to a dam built to raise the level of the lake enough to support native fish once again. However, it may never return to its former glory unless massive changes are made to management of water from sources like the Amu Darya River. Since the 1960s, the Aral Sea has lost 90% of its source-water, which begins as snow in the Himalayas.
Google-powered Timelapse won’t take us all the way back to the 1960s, but it will allow us to see SIGNIFICANT change from 1984 – 2012. Go ahead and zoom in for a closer look... http://blog.skytruth.org/2014/05/timelapse-aral-sea.html