Why does Colorado terrain look like a pixellated image? (Google Maps)

Check out this view of Colorado just southeast of Denver. It looks like a pixellated, corrupt image but when you zoom in, you’ll see that the land really does look like that.

Even more interesting are the circular patterns that pepper the region.

Can someone familiar with the area shed some light on why the terrain looks like this?

CMC +fnord!

Funny thing with the OP’s link is that the zoom levels were photographed in different seasons - if you zoom in, the picture changes abruptly from lush green to parched brown.

here is a link to some centre-pivot irrigated farms in the middle of a desert in Libya. They’ve used a more efficient layout there, although it doesn’t exactly look like they’re pushed for space.

Since the correct explanation has already been posted, I’ll just note that the area linked in the OP is actually Kansas.

Wow, that’s wild! I’ve seen that kind of patchwork land from planes and on Google maps but never so much of it.

Am I the only one who noticed that the land shown in the link is in Kansas, not Colorado, and is not just SE of Denver, but actually quite some distance from it? Specifically, between Garden City and Dodge City, KS, along the Arkasas River (pronounced, btw, in that state alone, the Are - can - zas river).

Which is actually really useful. Nice catch Mangetout!
If you look at this close-up you can see the boom (sorta), the tracks from the boom towers, and the color change from the soil being watered.

CMC +fnord!

No, you’re not the only one. See post #4.

Oh SURE, make me READ the posts before mine! :smack:
About what I’d expect of myself at 2:54 am. :eek:

I did refrain from pointing out that you also misspelled “Arkansas”. :wink:

I think that the effect you are seeing has as much or more to do with the Public Land Survey System (A.K.A. Township and Range system) which has been used to subdivide most of the U.S. mid-west and west, than it does with the center-pivot irrigation system.

As best I can tell from that image each irrigation circle is on a quarter-section. A township is 6 x 6 miles, containing 36 sections each of which is 1 x 1 mile. Each section is divided into 4 quarter-sections. It appears that there is one irrigation circle on each of these. The a quarter section is 160 acres, and when subdivided further into quarter-quarter sections these 40 acre plots gave rise to expressions such as “40 acres and a mule” or “going out to mow the back 40”.