Thanks human. Scars on the body of nature

American Henry Fair showed the world how painful nature, when humanity begins to interfere with the natural course of things. And on the body of nature are too wound "environmental scars", as, indeed, he called his project ...




The oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico due to an accident on an oil platform



Leaching of arsenic in groundwater. Canadys, South Carolina



The manufacturing plant fertilizers and herbicides in Louisiana, USA, 2010



Cumulative ponds on an oil refinery. Fort McMurray, Alberta, Canada. Photo taken in July 2009



Waste plant Carolina in the United States, 2009



Waste sulfur after extraction of bitumen in Fort McMurray, Canada, 2009



Waste coal power plant in Carolina, USA, 2009

Henry painstakingly collected pictures places on the planet, then spotted with cuts oil-polluted rivers and pesticides, it boils landfills industrial scale, then dug and abandoned coal mines, like open wounds. Despite the obvious negative motivated work photos turned piercingly beautiful, though pleading for help. The planet itself stradayusche looks at us through the eyes of the works of Henry Phair.



Sewage treatment pond near the old coal power plants in Germany, 2010



Pond to drain the waste near the power plant, a coal-fired. Lausitz, Germany



Disposal pond ash in a coal power plant. New Roads, Louisiana



Brooks alumina waste aluminum plant in Louisiana, USA. December 2005



Reset phosphates in the reservoir. Lakeland, Florida, USA, 2007

I was reminded of these pictures work of medical textbooks, illustrations for surgical procedures where clearly shows the living tissues and vasculature veins, a drop of blood on the skin, nerve fibers under the microscope and other internal organs. Until then, we've put our land, if she exposes her body, showing how it is suffering ...



Burning coal waste closeup. Canadys, South Carolina



Coal combustion leads to the need to bury three types of waste: ash ash, bottom ash and coarse suspension. Pineville, South Carolina



Toxic waste power plant in South Carolina, USA, 2009



Phosphate treatment followed by extraction with sulfuric acid, resulting in toxic waste, which kill all life for miles around. Fluorine-containing gaseous clouds are spread across the state of Florida.

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