Overview
    Identifiers
    Inventory Number
    2530DD2
    Site Name
    Tjakastad 126 & 127
    Site Category
    Record Administration
    Author
    clinton.jackson
    Last modified
    Thursday, May 2, 2024 - 21:26
      Location
      Location
      Mapping
      -25.97155, 30.838018
      Mpumalanga
      • Gert Sibande
      • Chief Albert Luthuli
      Grading
      Grading
      Grade I
      Grading Date
      GradingComment

      Grading by: South African Heritage Resources Agency

      Significance criteria
      Significance Categories
      Sphere of Significance
      UNESCO - World Heritage List
      Level
      High
      Statement of Significance

      The Barberton Makhonjwa Mountain contains the oldest well-preserved sequence of volcanic and sedimentary rocks on Earth. These highly accessible Archaean outcrops present a continuous 350 million year geological sequence, from 3 600 million years ago. The physical and chemical characteristics of these rocks are so remarkably well preserved that they provide a globally unparalleled history of the early Earth. In particular, they provide unique evidence of the formation of the earliest oceanic and continental crusts and of the initial phase of the evolution of our biosphere. The area is South Africa’s largest and most scientifically well-researched and important Greenstone Belt. The Geosites illustrate some of the earliest tectonic events and formative processes of Earth’s measurable history, including valuable clues as to the origin of life itself and include:

      basaltic lavas extruded as sub-marine tubes and “pillows‟;
      chemical sediments of black chert; volcanic lapilli (ash-ball hailstones) from Earth’s earliest volcanic eruptions;
      red and black banded iron formations created by biogenesis and precipitation;
      submarine earthquake evidence;
      spherule layers indicating earth’s earliest very large meteorite impact events;
      3 200-million-year-old beach deposits with biomats, mud cracks, wave ripples and tidal patterns;
      volcanic processes such as felsic agglomerates, dacitic tuffs and lavas;
      komatiitic lava flows, pillow lavas, ocelli, spinnifex olivine crystals;
      buck reef chert with the fossilized environment for the genesis of life;
      large exposures of migmatites and xenoliths;
      the original type-locality for the discovery of komatiite in 1968;
      exposed pillowed komatiites, some with spinifex textures, that are the signature outcrops of the world’s most diverse Archaean Greenstone Belt.

      Declaration
      DeclarationName
      Declaration Type
      Declaration Description

      The Barberton Makhonjwa Mountain contains the oldest well-preserved sequence of volcanic and sedimentary rocks on Earth. These highly accessible Archaean outcrops present a continuous 350 million year geological sequence, from 3 600 million years ago. The physical and chemical characteristics of these rocks are so remarkably well preserved that they provide a globally unparalleled history of the early Earth. In particular, they provide unique evidence of the formation of the earliest oceanic and continental crusts and of the initial phase of the evolution of our biosphere. The area is South Africa’s largest and most scientifically well researched and important Greenstone Belt. The Geosites illustrate some of the earliesttectonic events and formative processes of Earth’s measurable history, including valuable clues as to the origin of life itself and include:

      basaltic lavas extruded as sub-marine tubes and “pillows‟;
      chemical sediments of black chert; volcanic lapilli (ash-ball hailstones) from Earth’s earliest volcanic eruptions;
      red and black banded iron formations created by biogenesis and precipitation;
      submarine earthquake evidence;
      spherule layers indicating earth’s earliest very large meteorite impact events;
      3 200-million-year-old beach deposits with biomats, mud cracks, wave ripples and tidal patterns;
      volcanic processes such as felsic agglomerates, dacitic tuffs and lavas;
      komatiitic lava flows, pillow lavas, ocelli, spinnifex olivine crystals;
      buck reef chert with the fossilized environment for the genesis of life;
      large exposures of migmatites and xenoliths;
      the original type-locality for the discovery of komatiite in 1968;
      exposed pillowed komatiites, some with spinifex textures, that are the signature outcrops of the world’s most diverse Archaean Greenstone Belt.

      Gazette Date
      Gazette Number
      41704
      Gazette Notice Status
      Notice Date
      Notice Number
      585
      Declared by (Organisation/Heritage Authority)
      Media
      Images uploaded directly to Site