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Picturing life in the dust bowl remains of the once mighty Aral Sea

Photographer Kristina Varaksina has documented the lot of people living near what was once the fourth-largest freshwater lake in the world, the Aral Sea, much of which has become a barren desert
Quat is an artemia collector. Artemia is a primitive arthropod also known as brine shrimp, it is used as a rapidly growing food source for farm fish. The salinity level of the water in the Aral Sea does not allow any other life to exist in or near it. A tiny creature you can?t see with the naked eye is all the sea is willing to give.
A portrait of a lone fisherman catching Artemia (a primitive arthropod also known as brine shrimp)
Kristina Varaksina

ONCE the fourth-largest freshwater lake in the world, the Aral Sea has now shrunk from 68,000 square kilometres to just 10 per cent of its former size.

Photographer travelled to the Republic of Karakalpakstan, an autonomous region of Uzbekistan where the southern part of the lake is. She has documented those living in the area in her picture series The Land Beyond The River, taking elegant portraits and vibrant landscapes.

A caravan of ships at the bottom of the former Aral Sea territory, now a desert, close to Muynak, the town that used to live off fishing. The remaining part of the water is dozens of kilometres away.
Abandoned ships at sunset in what was once part of the Aral Sea
Kristina Varaksina

Soviet-era agricultural policies, including the diversion of rivers to irrigate a vast cotton monoculture, choked the lake鈥檚 water supply and led to livelihoods such as fishing being obliterated, while the loss of much of the lake changed the climate. But many Karakalpak people 鈥渃hoose to stay on their land and preserve their traditions, their unique culture and their language, which I find truly inspiring鈥, says Varaksina. The above shows abandoned ships at sunset in what was once part of the Aral Sea, but is now a desert.

Looking out of a shipwreck?s window. Only cattle now walk the deserted land.
A cow grazing on what used to be the lake bed
Kristina Varaksina

A shipwreck window (above) reveals a cow grazing on what used to be the lake bed, while the main image at the top of the piece is a portrait of a lone fisherman catching Artemia (a primitive arthropod also known as brine shrimp). High salinity in much of what is left of the lake doesn鈥檛 allow any other life to exist.

School girls standing next to an installation at the former southern shore of the Aral Sea in Muynak, formerly a seaport town. Their parents were born when the sea was already gone, and only their grandparents remember the sea being so close.
Girls by an art installation in Muynak
Kristina Varaksina

The above image shows school girls by an art installation on the former southern shore in Muynak, once a port town. This imagines how things used to look, in what is now desert.

https://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/images/84437/the-aral-sea-loses-its-eastern-lobe# August 19, 2014 Summer 2014 marked another milestone for the Aral Sea, the once-extensive lake in Central Asia that has been shrinking markedly since the 1960s. For the first time in modern history, the eastern basin of the South Aral Sea has completely dried. This image pair from the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) on NASA's Terra satellite shows the sea without its eastern lobe on August 19, 2014 (top). Substantial changes are apparent when compared to an image from August 25, 2000 (bottom), and again when compared to the approximate location of the shoreline in 1960 (black outline). "This is the first time the eastern basin has completely dried in modern times," said Philip Micklin, a geographer emeritus from Western Michigan University and an Aral Sea expert. "And it is likely the first time it has completely dried in 600 years, since Medieval desiccation associated with diversion of Amu Darya to the Caspian Sea." In the 1950s and 1960s, the government of the former Soviet Union diverted the Amu Darya and the Syr Darya?the region's two major rivers?to irrigate farmland. The diversion began the lake's gradual retreat. By the start of the Terra series in 2000, the lake had already separated into the North (Small) Aral Sea in Kazakhstan and the South (Large) Aral Sea in Uzbekistan. The South Aral had further split into western and eastern lobes. The eastern lobe of the South Aral nearly dried in 2009 and then saw a huge rebound in 2010. Water levels continued to fluctuate annually in alternately dry and wet years. According to Micklin, the desiccation in 2014 occurred because there has been less rain and snow in the watershed that starts in the distant Pamir Mountains; this has greatly reduced water flow on the Amu Darya. In addition, huge amounts of river water continue to be withdrawn for irrigation. The Kok-Aral Dam across the Berg Strait?a channel that connects the northern Aral Sea with the southern part?played some role, but has not been a major factor this year, he said. "This part of the Aral Sea is showing major year-to-year variations that are dependent on flow of Amu Darya," Micklin said. "I would expect this pattern to continue for some time."

The rough location of the lake鈥檚 shoreline in 1960, outlined faintly in black, is seen in a satellite image from NASA.