Ngwenya Mine

The Ngwenya Mine is located on Bomvu Ridge, northwest of Mbabane and near the northwestern border of Eswatini (Swaziland). This mine is considered to be the world's oldest. The haematite ore deposit was used in the Middle Stone Age to extract red ochre, while in later times the deposit was mined for iron smelting and iron ore export.

Ngwenya Mine
Location
Country Eswatini
Coordinates26.20178°S 31.03396°E / -26.20178; 31.03396
Production
ProductsIron ore (and derived specularite)
History
Opened41,000 to 43,000 years ago (oldest mine known in History)
Closed2014

Etymology

Ngwenya means "crocodile" in Swazi.[1] This name comes from the fact that the mountains containing the mine was crocodile-shaped, before heavy-mining began in the 1960s and defaced this ancestral shape.[2]

Background

Phase 1

Several stone age artefacts have been found in the mine during archaeological works in the late 1960s and early 1970s. Their age was established with radiocarbon dating as older than 20,000 years. Later, radiocarbon dating yielded the age of the oldest mining activities as 41,000 to 43,000 years.[3] This would make Ngwenya the oldest known mine.[4][5] The site was known to Early Man for its deposits of red and specular haematite, used in cosmetics and rituals.[6]

Phase 2

Red ochre from here was extracted by the ancestors of the San and used in rock paintings, which are common in Eswatini. By about 400 AD, pastoralist Bantu tribes had arrived from the north. They were familiar with the smelting of iron ore, and traded their iron widely throughout the African continent.

Phase 3

The haematite iron ore with the iron content of up to 60% was prospected in the middle of the 19th century.[7] The Swaziland Iron Ore Development Company (SIODC), owned by the Anglo-American Corporation, started mining of the deposit in 1964.[7] A ten-year contract with a Japanese company made it the largest consumer of the iron ore. The open pit mining took place between 1964 and 1977, temporarily boosting the economic development of the area by establishing the Goba railway line connecting the mine with the Mozambique Railway System, and an electricity supply network (Matsapha industrial Site).[4] An estimated 20,000,000 tonnes of iron ore have been extracted from the mine.[8] However, an estimated 32 million tons of ore remained in the soil. Supposedly the Anglo-American Corporation stopped prospecting the mine because it got flooded.[9]

There was a plan to revive extraction activities in the mine, but the price of iron ore fell, making the project hardly profitable. The land was eventually donated to the Swaziland National Trust Commission for management.[10]

The mine's visitor center opened in 2005.[1] The building was donated by the Republic of China on Taiwan, and some ancient tools displayed in the center were recovered with the help of the European Union.[11]

In 2008, as the Swazi government was considering reopening the mine to extraction activities, the Swaziland National Trust Commission submitted the site to the UNESCO's list of World Heritage Sites to protect it, but the submission was not accepted.[12][9] The inactive ancient mine is called the Lion Cavern. The modern-operations mine nearby is now flooded.[1]

Phase 4

The Indian group Salgaocar operated the modern-day mine from 2011 to 2014 through the Salgaocar Swaziland limited Company.[9] Before allocating the mine to Salgaocar, the king Mswati III dismissed the National Trust Commission's request to protect the area from new mining activities, and replaced the entire board of the Commission to permanently stop those demands.[13]

Those operations lead to a heavy pollution of the water sources that feed the city of Mbabane. Among many environmental issues, the mining operations are a threat to the Disa intermedia, a protected orchid growing exclusively in the region. Cases of corruption to get the mining licence were reported, including a $28 million donation to the king by Salgaocar. The deal established a 25% ownership of the mine for the king, 25% for the government, and 50% to Salgaocar. Reports also claimed that Salgaocar was using Mozambican and South African trucks to avoid paying import taxes. 2,500 jobs were announced after the Salgaocar-Swazi deals, but the positions were never created.[9][13] Salgaocar ceased its mining activities in Ngwenya in 2014.[14]

In January 2018, the Mineral Management Board announced it was ready to relaunch prospecting activities at the Ngwenya mine.[14]

In September 2018, the visitor center burnt to ashes. The National Trust Commission declared that all the ancient artifacts in the center were lost in the fire. The officers on site did not react when the fire started to spread.[11]

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See also

References

  1. Ngwenya Mine & Lion Cavern, Thekingdomofeswatini.com (accessed 13 May 2019)
  2. The 43,000 Year Old Iron Ore Mine in Ngwenya, Bigbeaverdiaries.com, 15 April 2016 (accessed 13 May 2019)
  3. Coakley, George J. "The Mineral Industry of Swaziland" (PDF). United States Geological Survey. Retrieved 2010-01-22.
  4. "Ngwenya Mines". UNESCO. 2008-12-31.
  5. Matsebula, J. S. M. (1988). A history of Swaziland. Longman. ISBN 978-0-582-03167-8.
  6. Dart, R. A.; Beaumont, P. (1969). "Evidence of Iron Ore Mining in Southern Africa in the Middle Stone Age". Current Anthropology. 10 (1): 127–128. doi:10.1086/201014. JSTOR 2740688.
  7. Waïtzenegger, Jacques A.; Collings, Francis d'A.; Carstens, Reimer O. (1970). "The Economy of Swaziland (L'économie du Swaziland) (La economía de Swazilandia)". Staff Papers - International Monetary Fund. 17 (2): 390–452. JSTOR 3866292.
  8. Baird, Bill (2004). "Ancient mining in Swaziland". The Edinburgh Geologist. 42.
  9. Nellie Bowles, Swaziland's Ngwenya mine extracts its ore and exacts its price, Mg.co.za, 31 August 2012 (accessed 13 May 2019)
  10. This mine in Swaziland that produced iron 43,000 years ago is the world’s oldest, Face2faceafrica.com, 27 May 2018 (accessed 13 May 2019)
  11. Samkelisiwe Khosa, Ngwenya mine history burns To Ashes], Swazi Observer, 25 September 2018 (accessed 13 May 2019) (accessed on pressreader.com)
  12. Ngwenya Mines, Unesco.org, 31 December 2008 (accessed 13 May 2019)
  13. Ngwenya iron ore mine to reopen, Steelguru.com, 23 January 2018 (accessed 13 May 2019)

Further reading

  • Sarah Watling, What does the mine have to tell us? Art as a reclamation strategy in the post-mined landscape of the oldest known mine in the world, Ngwenya Mine, Swaziland, ed. Digital Repository at the University of Maryland, 2013
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