- ARALSEA
- Russian body that's a subject of environmental concern
- It disappeared due to irrigation
- It's shrinking due to the Qaraqum Canal
- Shrinking salt-water lake
- Site of numerous ship graveyards
- Lost endorheic lake of Kazakhstan
- Body of water that's more desert nowadays
- It straddles the Kazakh-Uzbek border
- Lake that was formerly one of the world's largest
- Subject of a large-scale Kazakh/Uzbek environmental disaster
- Lake bordering Kazakhstan
- The once-bustling Uzbek city of Moynaq was formerly on it
- Body between Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan
- About 25,000 square miles of Asia
- Body of water bordering Kazakhstan
- Amu Darya outlet
- Body on Uzbekistan's border
- It's on Uzbekistan's border
- Amu Darya River outlet
- Asian saltwater lake
- Shrinking Asian lake
- Shrunken body of Asia
- Shrinking body of Asia
- It's been shrinking since 1960
- Body of water that used to kinda look like a foot, but now just kinda looks like some toes
- Great inland waters
- Central Asian expanse
- Lake east of the Caspian
- It's less than half its 1960 size
- Victim of river diversion in Asia
- Asian border lake
- Shrinking lake
- Shrunken Asian lake
- The Dike Kokaral divides its two sections
- Kazakh-Uzbek border lake
- Part of it is now a desert
- Amu Darya's outlet
- Ustyurt Plateau neighbor
- It's between Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan
- Large Asian lake
- Shrinking Asian water
- Earth in the Balance subject
- Water split in 1987
- Shrinking water of Asia
- One-time fourth-largest lake
- Shrinking water
- Water that borders Kazakhstan
- Lake now split into four parts
- Erstwhile Asian lake
- Large ex-lake
- Site of sand-locked ships cited by Gore
- The Amu Darya flows into it
- 26,166 sq. mi. of water.
- Asian lake almost as big as Lake Victoria.
- 24,634 sq. mi. of water.
- Asiatic body of water.
- Inland waters of Asia.
- 26,000 square miles of water.
- Body of water near Red Sand Desert.
- Geographical feature of Asia.
- Asian body of water.
- Great Central Asian lake.
- Lake NW of Tashkent.
- Body of water in Asia.
- U. S. S. R. water body.
- Caspian's neighbor
- Russian body of water
- Asian salt lake
- Fourth-largest inland body of water
- U.S.S.R. body of water
- Salty U.S.S.R. expanse
- U.S.S.R. inland body of water
- Landlocked Asian waters
- Victim of a 20th-century environmental tragedy
- Uzbek lake
- About 26,000 square miles of Asia
- World's fourth-largest inland body of water
- It's shrinking in Asia
- Fast-shrinking body
- Noted lake with more than 10% salinity
- Uzbek body of water
- Body of water between Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan
- Body of water on 60° East longitude
- Body of water south of Orsk
- It's now less than half its 1960 size
- Lake on the edge of Kazakhstan
- Shrinking body
- Waters fed by the Amu Darya
- Part of the Uzbekistan border
- Body of water on the Uzbek border
- Kazakh border lake
- Polluted Asian lake
- Amu Darya outlet, once
- Body that's a lot thinner than it used to be
- Body that's now a fraction of its former self
- The Amu Darya no longer feeds it
- Asian body of water that's now largely dried up
- Body undergoing desertification
- Body of water greatly shrunk by 1960s Soviet irrigation
- It was once the world's fourth-largest lake
- Lake known for its high salinity
- Uzbekistan border lake
- Salt-water lake
- Kazakh-Uzbek shrinker
- It borders the Kyzyl Kum Desert
- The Soviets shrank it
- Where the Amu Darya empties
- Body of water on the border of Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan
- Huge Asian body of water
- About 12,000 square miles of Asia
- It borders Kazakhstan
- About 25,000 square miles in Asia
- It borders Uzbekistan
- Disappearing Asian body of water
- Large Asian border lake
- Shrinking body of water
- Shrinking body of water in Asia
- Body of water that has largely dried up
- Kazakh waters
- Lake gaining ground
- It separates Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan
- About 26,000 square miles of Asia, once
- Kazakhstan border water
- Fourth-largest lake
- Home to many ship graveyards
- Shrinking Asian body
- Syr Darya terminus
- Amu Darya's outflow
- Fourth-largest lake until the 1970s
- Disappearing lake of Asia
- Its surface area is about 25% of what it was in 1960
- Former third-biggest lake in the world