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National Geographic

For nearly five decades, Edward Burtynsky has captured the impacts of human industry on Earth—mines, factories, cities—rendering vast landscapes of transformation in haunting detail. His otherworldly landscapes have the twin effect of disorienting the viewer while emphasizing our intimate connections to corners of the globe that usually remain out of sight—whether that's a ribbon of water near a nickel mine in Ontario glowing orange or an aerial shot of the border between an Arizona suburb and a neighboring Native American reservation. Discover more about Burtynsky—including what inspires him, the artists he admires, and his photography techniques—at the link in bio. Photographs by @edwardburtynsky

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Comments
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1 days ago

Is this the Red River🤔 ??

Paul Whitton
9

1 days ago

An incredibly important thing to be documenting, bravo for spreading this impactful series of images and all that you do to create awareness on this mostly unknown subject that seems to creep up while no one is watching. We’re glad you are @edwardburtynsky

Anthony
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1 days ago

When the earth is ruined for our children and they have to live in the mass extinction event capitalism has created, at least we can rest easy that for a brief moment we made a handful of unbelievably rich people even richer!!

Charlie Mackay
4

1 days ago

Cailid

Laurie
3

1 days ago

Let’s see if the tRump group can eradicate such images as they erased the climate history for the US. Don’t laugh. They’re controlling more and more information in ways that we’d never even thought of.

Bree
2

1 days ago

The suburbs next to the reservation photo makes me feel something.

Henny Deborah
2

1 days ago

❤️

Женя Холодий
1

1 days ago

Fantastic photo😍😍😍😍

Endy Navarro
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1 days ago

0

1 days ago

Remember that the very minerals taken out of that soil is being used by you in many ways.

0

1 days ago

🤔

Gregory Conn
0

1 days ago

🔥🔥👏

Sarbast
0

1 days ago

😍😍

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