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World's
fourth largest freshwater lake loses 80 percent of its water Washington:
Reports indicate that Central Asia's vast Aral Sea , which was once the world's
fourth largest freshwater lake, has dramatically retreated, with its eastern section
losing about 80 percent of its water in just four years. According to a report
in the National Geographic News, the immense body of water, which straddles Uzbekistan
and Kazakhstan , was once the world's fourth largest freshwater lake. But in the
past 30 years, 60 percent of the lake has disintegrated, according to NASA's Earth
Observatory. In the 1960s, farmers in this arid region began diverting water from
two major rivers that flow into the lake to irrigate cotton fields and rice paddies.
By the end of the 1980s, the Aral had split in two lakes: the Small Aral Sea to
the north and the horseshoe-shaped Large Aral Sea to the south. By 2000, the Large
Aral Sea had split into two sections, an eastern and western lobe. Without an
influx of freshwater, the concentration of salts and minerals in the soil began
to build up, making the remaining water saltier. This caused the commercial fishing
industry to collapse. Many people have since switched to rice farming, which requires
even more diverted water, according to Earth Observatory. According to experts,
the governments of the surrounding countries have not tried to slow the lake's
demise, and the poverty-stricken region's dependence on exports means that the
southern section of the lake may soon be gone for good. -August
6, 2009 Go
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