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Dramatic Edward Burtynsky image shows stark desert divide

This shot by the acclaimed photographer, taken from a helicopter, is part of a new exhibition of his work at New York City's International Center of Photography

Salt River Pima and Maricopa Indian Community/Suburb, Scottsdale, Arizona, USA, 2011 photo(s) ?EdwardBurtynsky, courtesy Howard Greenberg Gallery, New York

There is no geophysical logic to the sharp partition in the middle of this picture. A US federal act, the Land Ordinance of 1785, divided North America鈥檚 vast western territories into rectilinear townships and sections. So when pumps pull water out of the aquifer beneath Salt River Valley, Arizona, squares of desert like this suburb of Phoenix grow green, settled and busy.

The Indigenous Pima and Maricopa peoples used to farm this land; it was turned into this comfortable conurbation in the 2000s. Valley settlements like this one depend on an increasingly complex and costly water-management system.

Photographer Edward Burtynsky was in a helicopter on his way to the already-desertified Colorado river delta in Mexico in 2011 when he spotted this place. As a student, his first assignment had been to 鈥渃apture evidence of the activities of man鈥. He likes to say that, after 40 years of pioneering effort with large-format colour, digital and drone photography, he has more or less delivered. 鈥淚 was out there early,鈥 he says, 鈥渢rying to figure it all out, trying to tell the story of our impact on the planet.鈥

This shot and more of Burtynsky鈥檚 photos are being exhibited in a solo exhibition, , at New York City鈥檚 International Center of Photography until 28 September.

Topics: Earth / photography