Once one of the four largest lakes in the world (it was 26,300 square miles), the Aral Sea dried up when the rivers feeding it were diverted for irrigation purposes.
Aral Sea translates to "Sea of Islands" for the over 1,100 islands it was once home to. Today, dozens of ships are disintegrating in the scorching desert heat.
Today, the nearest shore is almost 100 miles away.
In the 1960s, the Aral Sea began to steadily shrink when Soviet irrigation projects diverted the rivers feeding it.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdIt has since shrunk to less than 10% of its original size, and is considered one of the most catastrophic environmental disasters of all time.
Moynaq's many fishermen followed the lake's shrinking shores, but as the lake disappeared its salinity levels rose, killing all the fish. The town, heavily reliant on the fishing industry, slowly died along with it.
The eastern basin of the Aral Sea is now known as the Aralkum desert. It is said that the Aral Sea disaster could be undone if the diverted rivers, which are irrigating cotton fields, were re-diverted. However, Uzbekistan doesn't have the money to do this, and relies on its cotton industry.
Today it's a ghost town. There are murals and signs depicting fish all over town, proving how it used to be a bustling fishing town. In fact, the Aral Sea fishing industry apparently employed around 40,000 at its peak.
Long shuttered fish canneries are sprinkled among the wrecks.