Abstract

Rainfall measured on the KwaZulu-Natal Drakensberg escarpment, the first from above 2 800m a.s.l., are presented from two locations. Total rainfall at the top of Sani Pass (2 850 m a.s.l.) in the southern Drakensberg was 742 mm in 2002, while the January months of 2002 and 2003 averaged 109 mm. Rainfall on Sentinel Peak (3 165 m a.s.l.) in the northern KZN Drakensberg during 2003 totalled 765 mm and 145 mm was measured in January 2003. Recorded rainfall was marginally lower than, but within 6% of, rainfall recorded at adjacent lower altitude Drakensberg stations over the same period. The number of rain days increased marginally with altitude and the data suggest that even though the amount of rainfall on the escarpment is similar to that at lower altitude, the frequency of rainfall events is higher on the escarpment. Although 2002 and 2003 were dryer than normal years in the region, comparisons between these data and prior estimations, where rainfall was expected to range between 1 500 and 2 000 mm/a, shows that totals for the summit of the escarpment could have been over-estimated in the past. Measurement of rainfall is ongoing. Water SA Vol.31 (3) 2005: pp.399-402

Highlights

  • Rainfall data and accurate rainfall estimation in the Drakensberg and adjacent Lesotho highlands are of fundamental importance in geomorphological, hydrological and botanical research and form a basis for palaeoenvironmental reconstruction

  • Rainfall estimation for the escarpment zone has been a topic of research in the past, notably by Tyson et al (1976) and Schulze (1979)

  • All rainfall data for the high Drakensberg are derived by projection from stations at lower altitudes

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Summary

Introduction

Rainfall data and accurate rainfall estimation in the Drakensberg and adjacent Lesotho highlands are of fundamental importance in geomorphological, hydrological and botanical research and form a basis for palaeoenvironmental reconstruction. Contemporary meteorological data are sparse (Boelhouwers and Meiklejohn, 2002) and measured rainfall data for the Drakensberg escarpment region (above 2 500 m a.s.l.) do not exist on record. Rainfall estimation for the escarpment zone has been a topic of research in the past, notably by Tyson et al (1976) and Schulze (1979). No rainfall records from the top of the escarpment have been forthcoming in recent years to verify these estimates, and most contemporary geomorphological research in the Drakensberg cite the values given by Tyson et al (1976) and/or Schulze (1979) This paper presents the first measured rainfall data from the southern and northern KwaZulu-Natal Drakensberg escarpment as part of ongoing meteorological monitoring in the high mountain regions at the South Africa-Lesotho border

Previous research
Equipment and calibration
Rain Days
Rain days
Southern Drakensberg
Findings
Sentinel Peak
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