Mining landscapes of the Gauteng City-Region

dc.contributor.authorBobbins, Kerry
dc.contributor.authorTrangos, Guy
dc.date.accessioned2018-02-08T14:35:48Z
dc.date.available2018-02-08T14:35:48Z
dc.date.issued2018-01
dc.description.abstractThe extraction of gold along the Witwatersrand mining belt has fundamentally shaped the Gauteng City-Region (GCR) over more than a century. Mining in the region occurred across a vast area. The Witwatersrand basin is made up of three sub-basins – the West’, ‘Central’ and ‘East’ Rand – and stretches across a further seven distinct gold mining areas. These goldfields attracted prospectors, industrialists and work-seekers from across South Africa and around the world. They were responsible for the formation of Johannesburg and, over time, the development of large parts of the extended metropolis around it. For many years, gold mining produced immense wealth for mining companies, banks and residents – indeed the wealth extracted fired the entire South African economy. But there have been negatives. Gold mining also spawned a war, entrenched deep social divides, instilled exploitative labour practices, and devastated the natural environment. Though the industry is now in decline, the landscapes affected by mining are still identifiable by toxic scars that traverse the city-region. This Research Report, GCRO’s seventh, considers how the legacies of mining have been imprinted on the towns and cities of the Gauteng City-Region. The report uses ‘mining landscapes’ as a conceptual device to structure an analysis of the diverse impacts of mining, and to highlight the need for a comprehensive and collaborative approach to manage its after-effects. The report makes a unique contribution to existing literature on mining and mining waste in the city-region by presenting an integrated perspective on their urban, environmental, social and economic processes, characteristics and consequences, both historical and contemporary. While accounts are often told from the viewpoint of specific disciplines (such as history, geography or sociology), the analyses presented in this report – comprising of written pieces, archival excerpts and photo essays – are unbounded by distinctive disciplinary conforms. This allows for the diversity of the landscape to be explored in new ways. The report makes a call for the GCR’s mining landscapes to be understood as a connected landscape of systems rather than a set of isolated and forgotten features of a bygone mining era. From the abandoned mine areas that scatter the surface of the GCR, to earth tremors caused by hollowed out cavities below the earth, silicosis, acid mine drainage, distressed mining towns and more recent histories of artisanal mining – the legacy of gold mining in Gauteng has a variety of expressions, all emerging from the same interconnected history. The concluding chapter looks to the future and considers the possibilities for innovative and collaborative approaches to unshackle the towns and cities of the Witwatersrand from their gold-mining inheritance. This includes the prospects for spatial transformation, repairing social divisions, cultivating natural assets, and remedying the destructive health and environmental effects of a century of mining activity.en_ZA
dc.description.librarianAP2018en_ZA
dc.identifier.isbn978-0-6399114-8-9
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/10539/23829
dc.language.isoenen_ZA
dc.publisherGauteng City-Region Observatoryen_ZA
dc.relation.ispartofseriesGCRO Research Report;7
dc.subjectminingen_ZA
dc.subjectacid mine drainageen_ZA
dc.subjectmining wasteen_ZA
dc.subjectenvironmenten_ZA
dc.subjectspatial transformationen_ZA
dc.subjectmining landscapesen_ZA
dc.titleMining landscapes of the Gauteng City-Regionen_ZA
dc.typeOtheren_ZA
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