Brief Description
A serial site – in Cape Province, South Africa – made up of eight
protected areas, covering 553,000 ha, the Cape Floral Region is one of
the richest areas for plants in the world. It represents less than 0.5%
of the area of Africa but is home to nearly 20% of the continent’s
flora. The site displays outstanding ecological and biological
processes associated with the Fynbos vegetation, which is unique to the
Cape Floral Region. The outstanding diversity, density and endemism of
the flora are among the highest worldwide. Unique plant reproductive
strategies, adaptive to fire, patterns of seed dispersal by insects, as
well as patterns of endemism and adaptive radiation found in the flora,
are of outstanding value to science.
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Read more... [Cape Floral Region]
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Brief Description
The Taung Skull Fossil Site, part of the extension to the site
inscribed in 1999, is the place where in 1924 the celebrated Taung
Skull – a specimen of the species Australopithecus africanus – was
found. Makapan Valley, also in the site, features in its many
archaeological caves traces of human occupation and evolution dating
back some 3.3 million years. The area contains essential elements that
define the origin and evolution of humanity. Fossils found there have
enabled the identification of several specimens of early hominids, more
particularly of Paranthropus, dating back between 4.5 million and 2.5
million years, as well as evidence of the domestication of fire 1.8
million to 1 million years ago.
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Brief Description
The
ongoing fluvial, marine and aeolian processes in the site have produced
a variety of landforms, including coral reefs, long sandy beaches,
coastal dunes, lake systems, swamps, and extensive reed and papyrus
wetlands. The interplay of the park's environmental heterogeneity with
major floods and coastal storms and a transitional geographic location
between subtropical and tropical Africa has resulted in exceptional
species diversity and ongoing speciation. The mosaic of landforms and
habitat types creates breathtaking scenic vistas. The site contains
critical habitats for a range of species from Africa's marine, wetland
and savannah environments.
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Read more... [Greater St. Lucia Wetland Park]
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Brief Description
Mapungubwe is set hard against the northern border of South Africa,
joining Zimbabwe and Botswana. It is an open, expansive savannah
landscape at the confluence of the Limpopo and Shashe rivers.
Mapungubwe developed into the largest kingdom in the sub-continent
before it was abandoned in the 14th century. What survives are the
almost untouched remains of the palace sites and also the entire
settlement area dependent upon them, as well as two earlier capital
sites, the whole presenting an unrivalled picture of the development of
social and political structures over some 400 years.
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Read more... [Mapungubwe]
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Brief Description
The 160,000 ha Richtersveld Cultural and Botanical Landscape of
dramatic mountainous desert in north-western South Africa constitutes a
cultural landscape communally owned and managed. This site sustains the
semi-nomadic pastoral livelihood of the Nama people, reflecting
seasonal patterns that may have persisted for as much as two millennia
in southern Africa. It is the only area where the Nama still construct
portable rush-mat houses (haru om) and includes seasonal
migrations and grazing grounds, together with stock posts. The
pastoralists collect medicinal and other plants and have a strong oral
tradition associated with different places and attributes of the
landscape.
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Read more... [Richtersveld]
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Brief Description
Robben Island was used at various times between the 17th and 20th
centuries as a prison, a hospital for socially unacceptable groups and
a military base. Its buildings, particularly those of the late 20th
century such as the maximum security prison for political prisoners,
witness the triumph of democracy and freedom over oppression and
racism.
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Read more... [Robben Island]
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Brief Description
The uKhahlamba Drakensberg Park has exceptional natural beauty in its
soaring basaltic buttresses, incisive dramatic cutbacks, and golden
sandstone ramparts. Rolling high altitude grasslands, the pristine
steep-sided river valleys and rocky gorges also contribute to the
beauty of the site. The site’s diversity of habitats protects a high
level of endemic and globally threatened species, especially birds and
plants. This spectacular natural site also contains many caves and
rock-shelters with the largest and most concentrated group of paintings
in Africa south of the Sahara, made by the San people over a period of
4,000 years. The rock paintings are outstanding in quality and
diversity of subject and in their depiction of animals and human
beings. They represent the spiritual life of the now extinct San
people.
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Read more... [UKhahlamba / Drakensberg Park]
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Brief Description
Vredefort Dome, approximately 120 km south-west of Johannesburg, is a
representative part of a larger meteorite impact structure, or
astrobleme. Dating back 2,023 million years, it is the oldest
astrobleme yet found on Earth. With a radius of 190 km, it is also the
largest and the most deeply eroded. Vredefort Dome bears witness to the
world’s greatest known single energy release event, which had
devastating global effects including, according to some scientists,
major evolutionary changes. It provides critical evidence of the
Earth’s geological history and is crucial to understanding of the
evolution of the planet. Despite the importance of impact sites to the
planet’s history, geological activity on the Earth’s surface has led to
the disappearance of evidence from most of them, and Vredefort is the
only example to provide a full geological profile of an astrobleme
below the crater floor.
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Read more... [Vredefort Dome]
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