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The sea was known in ancient times as the Oxianus Lacus (Lake of Oxus) as the Oxus river, now known as the Amu Darya, is the principal river flowing into this sea. Between 1960 and 1990 the water level dropped 13 m/40 ft, reducing the lake to two-thirds of its original area. Between 1989 and 1991 alone, its area was cut by nearly half; the sea has now become two separate water areas: the Large and Small Aral seas covering (in 1991) 31,000 sq km/11,970 sq mi and 2,800 sq km/1,080 sq mi, respectively. The shrinkage is caused by expanded irrigation schemes and climate change: hotter, drier summers and longer, colder winters and the number of days without rain per year increased from 30 in the 1950s to 120 in 1993. The 24 native fish species in the lake have been reduced to four. Dust storms are common, and winds drop 43 million tonnes of salt a year on the surrounding cropland.
In 1994 the governments of five central Asian states pledged 1% of their budgets to help save the Aral Sea and improve the health of those living nearby.
Blue stands for the night sky and for water as a source of life. White represents peace. Red indicates the life-force. Green recalls nature and fertility. Effective date: 11 October 1991.
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