(Redirected from Waterberg Massif)
River gorge in the Lapalala Wilderness, Waterberg, South Africa, showing horizontal
sandstone layering.
The 'Waterberg Biosphere' is a
massif of approximately 15,000 square kilometers in north
Limpopo Province,
South Africa. Waterberg is the first region in the northern part of South Africa to be named as a
Biosphere Reserve by
UNESCO. The extensive rock formation was shaped by hundreds of millions of years of riverine erosion to yield diverse bluff and
butte landform[1]. The ecosystem can be characterised as a
dry deciduous forest or
Bushveld. Within the Waterberg there are
archaeological finds dating to the
Stone Age, and nearby are early
evolutionary finds related to the origin of
humans.
Geology
The underlying rock formation derives from the
Kaapvaal craton, formed as a precursor island roughly 2.7 billion years ago. This crustal formation became the base of the Waterberg, which was further transformed by upward extrusion of
igneous rocks
[William Taylor, Gerald Hinde and David Holt-Biddle, ''The Waterberg'', Struik Publishers, Capetown, South Africa (2003) ISBN 1-86872-822-6]. These extruded rocks, containing
minerals such as
vanadium and
platinum, are called the
Bushveld igneous complex. The original extent of this rock
upthrust involved about 250,000 square kilometers, and is sometimes called the Waterberg
Supergroup.
Sedimentary deposition from rivers cutting through Waterberg endured until roughly 1.5 billion years ago. In more recent time (around 250 million years ago) the Kaapvaal craton collided with the supercontinent
Gondwana, and split Gondwana into its modern day continents. Waterberg today contains
mesas,
buttes and some
kopje outcrops. Some of cliffs stand up to 550 meters above the plains, with exposed multi-coloured sandstone.
Stone Age man at Waterberg

Bushman
Stone Age rock painting, Lapalala Wilderness, Waterberg, South Africa.
The
sandstone formations could retain
groundwater sufficient to make a suitable environment for primitive man. The
cliff overhangs offered natural shelters for these early humans. The first
human ancestors may have been at Waterberg as early as three million years ago, since Makapansgat, 40 kilometers distant, has yielded
skeletons of ''
Australopithecus africanus''
[2]. Hogan suggests that
Homo erectus, whose evidence remains were also discovered in
Makapansgat, "may have purposefully moved into the higher areas of the Waterberg for summer (December to March) game".
Bushmen entered Waterberg around two thousand years ago. They produced
rock paintings at Lapalala within the Waterberg, including depictions of
rhinoceros and
antelope. Early
Iron Age settlers in Waterberg were
Bantu, who had brought
cattle to the region. The Bantu created a problem in Waterberg, since cattle reduced
grassland caused invasion of brush species leading to an outbreak of the
tse-tse fly. The ensuing
epidemic of
sleeping sickness depopulated the plains, but at higher elevations man survived, because the fly cannot survive above 600 meters.
Later people left the first Stone Age artifacts recovered in northern
South Africa. Starting about the year 1300 AD,
Nguni settlers arrived with new technologies, including the ability to build dry-stone walls, which techniques were then used to add defensive works to their
Iron Age forts, some of which walls survive to today.
Archaeologists continue to excavate Waterberg to shed light on the Nguni culture and the associated
dry-stone architecture.
European arrival
The first white settlers arrived in Waterberg in 1808 and the first naturalist a
Swede appeared just before mid 19th century. Around the mid 19th century, a group of
Dutch travelers set out from
Cape Town in search of
Jerusalem. Arriving in Waterberg, they mis-estimated their distance and thought they had reached
Egypt.
After battles between Dutch settlers and tribesmen, the races co-existed until around 1900. The Dutch brought further cattle
grazing, multiplying the impacts of indigenous
tribes. By the beginning of the 20th century there were an estimated 200 western inhabitants of the Waterberg
[3], and
grassland loss began to have a severe impact upon native
wildlife populations.
Flora and fauna
There are several sub-habitats within the Waterberg Biosphere, which is fundamentally a dry deciduous forest; according to Hogan: "These sub-habitats include ''high plateau
savanna'', ''specialized shaded cliff
vegetation system'' and ''riparian zone habitat'' with associated
marshes".
The savanna consists of rolling grasslands and a semi-
deciduous forest, with trees such as Mountain
seringa, Silver-leaf
terminalia and
Lavender tree. The canopy is mostly leafless during the dry winter. Native grasses include
Signal grass,
Goose grass and
Heather-topped grass. Indigenous grasses provide graze to support native
speciess including
impala, kudu,
klipspringer and
Blue wildebeest. Some
Pachypodium habitats are found especially in isolated
kopje formations.
Other indigenous mammals include
giraffe, white rhinoceros and
warthog.
Snakes include the
black mamba and
spitting cobra. In 1905
Eugene Marais studied these snakes of the Waterberg
[4]. Some birds seen are the Black-headed oriole and the
White-backed vulture[Tracey Hawthorne, ''Common Birds of South Africa'', Struik Publishing, South Africa (1998) ISBN 1-86872-120-5 ].
Vegetative cliff habitats are abundant in the Waterberg due to the extensive historic riverine
erosion. The
African Porcupine uses the protection of these cliffside caves. Some
trees cling to the cliff areas, including the
Paper tree, whose flaking bark hangs from their thick trunks. of specimens clinging to cliffsides above winding
streams below. Another tree in this habitat is the fever tree, thought by Bushmen to have special power to allow communication with the dead. It is found on cliffs above the Palala River including one site used for prehistoric ceremonies, which is also a location of some intact rock paintings.
Riparian zones are associated with various
rivers that cut through Waterberg. These surface waters all drain to the
Limpopo River which flows easterly to discharge into the
Indian Ocean. Red bush
willow is a riparian tree in this habitat. These riparian zones offer habitat for birds,
reptiles and
mammals that require more more water than
plateau species. The riverine areas house the
apex predator Nile crocodile and the
hippopotamus. These wet habitats are almost absent of water-related
insects, and the Waterberg is thus considered an almost
Malaria-free region.
Land management

Blue Wildebeests, Lapalala Wilderness, Waterberg,
South Africa
As of the year 2006 about 80,000 people live in the Waterberg, which is considered part of the Bushveld district of the Limpopo Province of South Africa. After
cattle grazing wrought ecological havoc in the mid 1900s, the land owners of the region became aware of the benefits of restoring habitat to attract and protect the original species of antelope,
white rhino,
giraffe,
hippopotami, and other species whose numbers dropped in the era of intense cattle grazing.
The rise in
eco-tourism has stimulated interest in
soil conservation practices to restore original grass species to the Waterberg. Land management practises required are expensive, but repay the landowner with added value of
wildlife habitat. There is also a trend of larger farms and open space areas with the resultant advantage of fence removal. This outcome not only benefits large mammal migration, but yields an improved
gene pool.
References
1. C.Michael Hogan, Mark L. Cooke and Helen Murray, ''The Waterberg Biosphere'', Lumina Technologies, May 22, 2006. [1]
2. C.Michael Hogan, Mark L. Cooke and Helen Murray, ''The Waterberg Biosphere'', Lumina Technologies, May 22, 2006
3. ''The Encyclopedic History of the Transvaal'', Praagh and Lloyd, Johannesberg (1906)
4. Eugene Marais, ''Soul of the Ape'', Human and Rousseau (1937)
See also
★
Boer Wars
★
Soil conservation
External links
★
Google map of heart of Waterberg
★
History of platinum mining in the Waterberg
★
Waterberg Biosphere Reserve (UNESCO)
★
Waterberg Photos