
Nababeep Mine, 302,500 tons of copper. All images © Dillon Marsh, shared with permission
When Cape Town-based photographer
This curiosity sparked his CGI series titled For What It’s Worth, which positions metallic orbs representative of the amount of material extracted within the original mines. The striking juxtapositions are profound visual indictments of how uncovering and selling precious metals like copper, gold, and platinum and stones like diamonds have consistently been prioritized over the health of the land. “My feelings have consistently and rapidly fluctuated between a sense of awe for what was gained and a sense of sadness for what it cost,” Marsh shares.
Framing many of the locations as scars in the earth, the images show 4.1 million tons of copper semi-buried in the steep gash of the Palabora Mine and 335 million troy ounces resting on the now-converted Free State Gold Field. The 7.6 million carats of diamonds pulled from Koffiefontein is so minuscule in comparison to the gaping hole required to obtain it that it’s barely visible without magnification.
Marsh is considering continuing For What It’s Worth at mines in other parts of the world, and you can see the blighted sites already in the collection on

O’Okiep Mine, 284,000 tons of copper

Palabora Mine, 4.1 million tons of copper

Osmium, 3 million troy ounces

Koffiefontein Mine, 7.6 million carats of diamonds

Platinum, 136 million troy ounces

Rhodium, 13 million troy ounces

Free State Gold Field, 335 million troy ounces of gold

Central Rand Gold Field, 250 million troy ounces of gold