Abstract

Carletonville is a gold-mining town in western Gauteng province, South Africa, and is located in the Merafong City Local Municipality’s geographical area of responsibility. It is one of the richest gold-producing areas in the world but unfortunately the current state of the town’s infrastructure is in shambles and the environment is in a pitiful state because of human activities that have caused massive physical changes. Geohydrological aspects such as complex geology and the compartmentalisation of the groundwater into seven areas separated by syenite dykes, of which five have been dewatered to facilitate the gold-mining, have made it the research area of choice. Unfortunately, this led to the formation of hundreds of new sinkholes between the towns of Westonaria and Carletonville and eventually the evacuation of the old town of Bank, abandoning the area and declaring it unsuitable for human settlements. To try and identify possible reasons for this unfortunate state of the human-induced environmental change all along the Wonderfontein Spruit draining the area, the author using a comprehensive literature review, study of geological maps and databases as well as through data collection and semi-structured interviews with selected role-players and stakeholders identified basic essential geographical, geohydrological, organisational and municipal management aspects of significance for consideration. These steps were all a part of an attempt to improve the nature and extent of basic water-, sanitation-, human settlements- and environmental management in the Westonaria, Carletonville and Khutsong areas.

Highlights

  • Carletonville is a gold-mining town situated on the western side of Gauteng province, South Africa, and borders on the North West province

  • South African research shows that 96% of sinkholes and subsidence that have occurred to date were induced by humans, generated by ingress of water from leaking waterbearing infrastructure, poor storm-water management and other factors or because of artificial lowering of the groundwater level

  • Sifiso Ngubelanga, a senior scientist from the Council for Geoscience, said: The Far West Rand area is one of those areas that have been highly influenced by sinkholes. This phenomenon dates back to as early as the 1960s when the mines started the dewatering of the area to access the underlying gold deposits. (IOL 2016:1). Because of these geohydrological and developmental realities in the Wonderfontein Spruit sub-catchment, the residents of Bekkersdal, Westonaria, Venterspost, Libanon, Carletonville and Khutsong human settlement areas do not have access to usable surface- and groundwater

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Summary

Introduction

Carletonville is a gold-mining town situated on the western side of Gauteng province, South Africa, and borders on the North West province. The Westonaria (Randwest Local Municipality) and Carletonville (MLM) areas have become more complicated and problematic with regard to socio-economic and environmental challenges These include, inter alia, West Rand issues of gold undermined surface areas, geologically underlain by dolomite, sinkholes, acid mine drainage and ineffective corporate social responsibility on the part of mining industries towards the natural and human-changed environment. Because of these geohydrological and developmental realities in the Wonderfontein Spruit sub-catchment, the residents of Bekkersdal, Westonaria, Venterspost, Libanon, Carletonville and Khutsong human settlement areas do not have access to usable surface- and groundwater (e.g. water abstracted through boreholes).

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