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Veld

Veld (/vɛlt/ or /fɛlt/), also spelled veldt, is a type of wide open rural landscape in Southern Africa. Particularly, it is a flat area covered in grass or low scrub, especially in the countries of South Africa, Lesotho, Eswatini, Zimbabwe and Botswana. A certain sub-tropical woodland ecoregion of Southern Africa has been officially defined as the Bushveld by the World Wide Fund for Nature.[1] Trees are not abundant—frost, fire and grazing animals allow grass to grow but prevent the build-up of dense foliage.

Typical veld near Petrified forest in Namibia
Springbok in growing veld; Etosha National Park, Namibia
Springboks in the burned veld; Etosha National Park, Namibia

Etymology edit

The word veld (Afrikaans pronunciation: [fɛlt]) comes from the Afrikaans word for "field".

The etymological origin is older modern Dutch veldt, a spelling that the Dutch abandoned in favour of veld during the 19th century,[2] decades before the first Afrikaans dictionary.[3][4] A cognate to the English field, it was spelt velt[5] in Middle Dutch and felt[6] in Old Dutch.

Climate edit

The climate of the veld is highly variable, but its general pattern is mild winters from May to September and hot or very hot summers from November to March, with moderate or considerable variations in daily temperatures and abundant sunshine. Precipitation mostly occurs in the summer months in the form of high-energy thunderstorms.

Over most of the South African Highveld, the average annual rainfall is between 500–900 millimetres (20–35 in) a year, decreasing to about 250 millimetres (9.8 in) near the western border and increasing to nearly 1,000 millimetres (39 in) in some parts of the Lesotho Highlands; the South African Lowveld generally receives more precipitation than the Highveld. Temperature is closely related to elevation. In general, the mean July (winter) temperatures range between 7 °C (45 °F) in the Lesotho Highlands and 16 °C (61 °F) in the Lowveld. January (summer) temperatures range between 18 °C (64 °F) and 30 °C (86 °F).

In Zimbabwe the precipitation averages around 750–900 millimetres (30–35 in) on the Highveld, dropping to less than 350 millimetres (14 in) in the lowest areas of the Lowveld. Temperatures are slightly higher than in South Africa.

Over the entire veld, seasonal and annual average rainfall variations of up to 40 percent are common. Damaging drought affects at least half the area about once every three or four years; it reduces plant and animal biomass to sustainable levels again. Everywhere the average number of hours of annual sunshine varies from 60 to 80 percent of the total amount possible.

Definitions edit

Veld can be loosely compared to the Australian terms outback or "the bush", to the prairie of North America, to the pampas lowlands of South America, or the steppe of Central Asia. Someone from Yorkshire might equate "wandering across the moors" to "walking through the veld."[citation needed]

By extension, the veld can be compared to the "boondocks" or those places "beyond the black stump" in Australia. There is a sense in which it refers in essence to unimproved land (and is therefore not the equivalent of the English paddock) and does not include areas used both for pastoral activities and the planting of crops. These areas are referred to as "fields". The word is less appropriate for land that is heavily forested, mountainous, or urban. The simplest explanation will be to say the word "veld" means "natural vegetation", excluding vegetation like swamps and forests. It does include mountains with vegetation but not deserts or mountains without natural vegetation.

The veld definition may encompass different natural environments, both humid and dry, such as coastal plain, coastal prairie, flooded grasslands and savannas, grassland, prairie, savanna, steppe, meadow, water-meadow, flood-meadow, wet meadow, as well as agricultural fields. Whereas mountainous peaks and thick forests do not really fit in with the term veld, bushes are acceptable. The area then becomes bushveld (Afrikaans: Bosveld), a term that is used mainly to describe "The Bushveld", which is both a loose botanical classification and a specific geographical part of what used to be known as the Transvaal, as described for example in the story Jock of the Bushveld.

Other uses edit

  • The word renosterveld, "rhinoceros-field", is now used to differentiate one of the major vegetation types of the Cape Floristic Region.
  • A carefully husbanded sports field on which the game of rugby is played in the middle of cities such as Cape Town or Johannesburg is referred to as a "rugbyveld" in the Afrikaans language.
  • The word "veld" also carries military connotations. The word "field" in English has a strong association with "war", as evidenced by the expression "the first foe in the field" and the lines of the ballad 'Lord Marlborough' (see John Churchill): "You generals all and champions bold, that takes delight in field, that knocks down churches and castle walls but now to death must yield". The same relationship is paralleled in Afrikaans. Just as the English army has its field marshals, the Boer armies had their Veldkornets and Veldkommandos.

Highveld and Lowveld edit

 
A map of South Africa showing the Great Escarpment and its relation to the Highveld, Lowveld and Lesotho Highlands. The portion of the Great Escarpment that is colored red is known as the Drakensberg. It forms the only well defined boundary of the Lesotho Highlands and the Low- and Highveld. The west- and southward extents of all three of these areas are arbitrary. The term "Lowveld" is used only in South Africa, Botswana and Zimbabwe. Thus, although the Lowveld is continuous with Mozambique's coastal plain, the term "Lowveld" is not used there, hence it is shown in orange, as opposed to the yellow in the other southern African countries. The term "Lowveld" is also not applied to other low-lying areas in South Africa, Botswana or Zimbabwe.
 
Highveld in Gauteng Province north of Johannesburg
 
The Mpumalanga lowveld, as seen from God's Window

Highveld edit

Much of the interior of Southern Africa consists of a high plateau, the higher portions 1,500–2,100 m (4,900–6,900 ft) of which are known as the Highveld, starting at the Drakensberg escarpment, 220 km (140 mi) to the east of Johannesburg and sloping gradually downwards to the west and south west, as well as to the north, through the Bushveld towards the Limpopo river.[7] These higher, cooler areas (generally more than 1,500 metres or 4,900 feet above sea level) are characterised by flat or gently undulating terrain, vast grasslands and a modified tropical or subtropical climate. To the east, the Highveld's border is marked by the Great Escarpment, or the Mpumalanga Drakensberg, but in the other directions the boundary is not obvious and often arbitrary. The blesbok and quagga were among the large animals that once roamed on the highveld in great numbers. Nowadays there still is a sizeable population of springbok in some areas,[8] though much of the area is devoted to Balls farming and South Africa's largest conurbation (Gauteng Province).

Lowveld edit

The lowlands, below about 500 m (1,640 ft) altitude, along South Africa's northern border with Botswana and Zimbabwe, where a 180-million-year-old failed rift valley cuts into Southern Africa's central plateau and locally obliterates the Great Escarpment,[9][10] is known as the Lowveld.[11] The Limpopo and Save rivers run from the central African highlands via the Lowveld into the Indian Ocean to the east. The Limpopo Lowveld extends southwards, east of the Drakensberg escarpment through Mpumalanga Province and ultimately into eastern Eswatini. This southern limb of the Lowveld is bounded by South Africa's border with Mozambique to the east and the north-eastern part of the Drakensberg to the west.[12] This region is generally hotter and less intensely cultivated than the Highveld. Until the mid-20th century, the Lowveld was still infested by the tsetse fly which transmits the sleeping sickness called nagana among the Zulus.[13]

Thornveld edit

Thornveld (also thorn veld or thornveldt), often referred to as "acacia thornveld", is a type of semi-arid savanna in which grassland with thorny acacia and certain species of thorny bushes predominate. The predominant plant species are usually different in the thornveld of the plains or in the hill thornveld, where, for example, species of genus Balanites are common.[14] Some of the characteristic species[15] in the thornveld include:

Sandveld and Hardveld edit

 
A calf in the Sandveld in Botswana
 
Bakwena Royal Cemetery, Molepolole, in the Hardveld area of southeast Botswana

Sandveld edit

Sandveld, in the general sense of the word, is a type of veld characterised by dry, sandy soil, typical of certain areas of the Southern African region. It usually absorbs all water from the seasonal rains, although aquatic habitats, largely seasonal, may be also found in specific places in the sandveld.[16] Only certain hardy plant species thrive in the sandveld environment. These consist especially of grasses forming clumps and certain kinds of trees and shrubs.[17] The sandveld vegetation has a particular pattern of growth, rarely covering the whole terrain and thus leaving patches of sandy soil exposed on the surface. Some of the typical sandveld species are Acacia haematoxylon, A. luederitzii, Boscia albitrunca, Terminalia sericea, Lonchocarpus nelsii, Bauhinia petersiana and Baphia massaiensis.

Hardveld edit

Hardveld is a term applied to certain areas of rocky soils in Botswana, located mostly in the eastern part of the country. The landscape is an undulating plain with scattered rocky hill ranges. There are areas of hardveld also in South Africa in the mountainous central Kamiesberg of the Northern Cape with hilly escarpments and deep river valleys. The soil of the hardveld is characterised by rocky outcrops, as well as an abundance of stones and pebbles of different shapes and sizes.

The flora of the hardveld is typical of rocky savanna, with denser vegetation and thus less denuded patches than in the sandveld, as well as taller trees.[18] There is also a higher diversity of species in the hardveld compared with the sandveld. Peltophorum africanum, Acacia nigrescens, A. tortilis, Combretum apiculatum and Colophospermum mopane are some of the representative species of the northern hardveld.[19]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Southern Africa bushveld". Terrestrial Ecoregions. World Wildlife Fund.
  2. ^ Winkel, Lammert Allard te. De grondbeginselen der Nederlandsche spelling: Regelen der spelling voor het Woordenboek der Nederlandsche Taal. Publisher: D. Noothoven van Goor, 1873. Download from: [1]
  3. ^ Eric Anderson Walker (ed). The Cambridge History of the British Empire, Volume 4. Cambridge University Press 1963 (Afrikaans: pp. 890–894)
  4. ^ Berger, Iris. South Africa in World History. Oxford University Press, 2009. ISBN 978-0195337938
  5. ^ Lemma = "velt", Middelnederlandsch Woordenboek, Dutch Language Union
  6. ^ Lemma = "felt", Oudnederlands Woordenboek, Dutch Language Union
  7. ^ Atlas of Southern Africa. (1984). p. 13. Reader's Digest Association, Cape Town
  8. ^ Richard Despard Estes, The Behavior Guide to African Mammals, University of California Press, ISBN 978-0-520-27297-2
  9. ^ McCarthy t. & Rubidge B. (2005) The Story of Earth & Life. p. 246-247. Struik Publishers, Cape Town.
  10. ^ McCarthy, T.S. (2013) The Okavango delta and its place in the geomorphological evolution of southern Africa. South African Journal of Geology 116: 1-54.
  11. ^ Atlas of Southern Africa. (1984). pp. 13, 192, 195. Reader's Digest Association, Cape Town
  12. ^ Atlas of Southern Africa. (1984). pp. 13, 182, 192. Reader's Digest Association, Cape Town
  13. ^ Steverding, Dietmar (2008). "The history of African trypanosomiasis". Parasites & Vectors. 1 (1): 3. doi:10.1186/1756-3305-1-3. ISSN 1756-3305. PMC 2270819. PMID 18275594.
  14. ^ . Ecotravel.co.za. Archived from the original on 11 May 2012. Retrieved 31 October 2012.
  15. ^ "KwaZulu-Natal Department of Agriculture – Mixed Thornveld Ecozone". Agriculture.kzntl.gov.za. Archived from the original on 1 July 2012. Retrieved 31 October 2012.
  16. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 20 July 2011. Retrieved 31 October 2012.
  17. ^ "Thamnochortus bachmannii". PlantZAfrica.com. Retrieved 31 October 2012.
  18. ^ "Microsoft Word – ORIG_Basin Profile.doc" (PDF). Retrieved 31 October 2012.[permanent dead link]
  19. ^ . Fao.org. Archived from the original on 15 September 2012. Retrieved 31 October 2012.

External links edit

  • Jacobs, Nancy (2000). "Grasslands and Thickets: Bush Encroachment and Herding in the Kalahari Thornveld". Environment and History. 6 (3): 289–316. doi:10.3197/096734000129342316. JSTOR 20723144.

veld, redirects, here, other, uses, disambiguation, also, spelled, veldt, type, wide, open, rural, landscape, southern, africa, particularly, flat, area, covered, grass, scrub, especially, countries, south, africa, lesotho, eswatini, zimbabwe, botswana, certai. Veldt redirects here For other uses see Veldt disambiguation Veld v ɛ l t or f ɛ l t also spelled veldt is a type of wide open rural landscape in Southern Africa Particularly it is a flat area covered in grass or low scrub especially in the countries of South Africa Lesotho Eswatini Zimbabwe and Botswana A certain sub tropical woodland ecoregion of Southern Africa has been officially defined as the Bushveld by the World Wide Fund for Nature 1 Trees are not abundant frost fire and grazing animals allow grass to grow but prevent the build up of dense foliage Typical veld near Petrified forest in NamibiaSpringbok in growing veld Etosha National Park NamibiaSpringboks in the burned veld Etosha National Park Namibia Contents 1 Etymology 2 Climate 3 Definitions 3 1 Other uses 3 2 Highveld and Lowveld 3 2 1 Highveld 3 2 2 Lowveld 3 3 Thornveld 3 4 Sandveld and Hardveld 3 4 1 Sandveld 3 4 2 Hardveld 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksEtymology editThe word veld Afrikaans pronunciation fɛlt comes from the Afrikaans word for field The etymological origin is older modern Dutch veldt a spelling that the Dutch abandoned in favour of veld during the 19th century 2 decades before the first Afrikaans dictionary 3 4 A cognate to the English field it was spelt velt 5 in Middle Dutch and felt 6 in Old Dutch Climate editThe climate of the veld is highly variable but its general pattern is mild winters from May to September and hot or very hot summers from November to March with moderate or considerable variations in daily temperatures and abundant sunshine Precipitation mostly occurs in the summer months in the form of high energy thunderstorms Over most of the South African Highveld the average annual rainfall is between 500 900 millimetres 20 35 in a year decreasing to about 250 millimetres 9 8 in near the western border and increasing to nearly 1 000 millimetres 39 in in some parts of the Lesotho Highlands the South African Lowveld generally receives more precipitation than the Highveld Temperature is closely related to elevation In general the mean July winter temperatures range between 7 C 45 F in the Lesotho Highlands and 16 C 61 F in the Lowveld January summer temperatures range between 18 C 64 F and 30 C 86 F In Zimbabwe the precipitation averages around 750 900 millimetres 30 35 in on the Highveld dropping to less than 350 millimetres 14 in in the lowest areas of the Lowveld Temperatures are slightly higher than in South Africa Over the entire veld seasonal and annual average rainfall variations of up to 40 percent are common Damaging drought affects at least half the area about once every three or four years it reduces plant and animal biomass to sustainable levels again Everywhere the average number of hours of annual sunshine varies from 60 to 80 percent of the total amount possible Definitions editVeld can be loosely compared to the Australian terms outback or the bush to the prairie of North America to the pampas lowlands of South America or the steppe of Central Asia Someone from Yorkshire might equate wandering across the moors to walking through the veld citation needed By extension the veld can be compared to the boondocks or those places beyond the black stump in Australia There is a sense in which it refers in essence to unimproved land and is therefore not the equivalent of the English paddock and does not include areas used both for pastoral activities and the planting of crops These areas are referred to as fields The word is less appropriate for land that is heavily forested mountainous or urban The simplest explanation will be to say the word veld means natural vegetation excluding vegetation like swamps and forests It does include mountains with vegetation but not deserts or mountains without natural vegetation The veld definition may encompass different natural environments both humid and dry such as coastal plain coastal prairie flooded grasslands and savannas grassland prairie savanna steppe meadow water meadow flood meadow wet meadow as well as agricultural fields Whereas mountainous peaks and thick forests do not really fit in with the term veld bushes are acceptable The area then becomes bushveld Afrikaans Bosveld a term that is used mainly to describe The Bushveld which is both a loose botanical classification and a specific geographical part of what used to be known as the Transvaal as described for example in the story Jock of the Bushveld Other uses edit The word renosterveld rhinoceros field is now used to differentiate one of the major vegetation types of the Cape Floristic Region A carefully husbanded sports field on which the game of rugby is played in the middle of cities such as Cape Town or Johannesburg is referred to as a rugbyveld in the Afrikaans language The word veld also carries military connotations The word field in English has a strong association with war as evidenced by the expression the first foe in the field and the lines of the ballad Lord Marlborough see John Churchill You generals all and champions bold that takes delight in field that knocks down churches and castle walls but now to death must yield The same relationship is paralleled in Afrikaans Just as the English army has its field marshals the Boer armies had their Veldkornets and Veldkommandos Highveld and Lowveld edit nbsp A map of South Africa showing the Great Escarpment and its relation to the Highveld Lowveld and Lesotho Highlands The portion of the Great Escarpment that is colored red is known as the Drakensberg It forms the only well defined boundary of the Lesotho Highlands and the Low and Highveld The west and southward extents of all three of these areas are arbitrary The term Lowveld is used only in South Africa Botswana and Zimbabwe Thus although the Lowveld is continuous with Mozambique s coastal plain the term Lowveld is not used there hence it is shown in orange as opposed to the yellow in the other southern African countries The term Lowveld is also not applied to other low lying areas in South Africa Botswana or Zimbabwe nbsp Highveld in Gauteng Province north of Johannesburg nbsp The Mpumalanga lowveld as seen from God s WindowHighveld edit Main article Highveld Much of the interior of Southern Africa consists of a high plateau the higher portions 1 500 2 100 m 4 900 6 900 ft of which are known as the Highveld starting at the Drakensberg escarpment 220 km 140 mi to the east of Johannesburg and sloping gradually downwards to the west and south west as well as to the north through the Bushveld towards the Limpopo river 7 These higher cooler areas generally more than 1 500 metres or 4 900 feet above sea level are characterised by flat or gently undulating terrain vast grasslands and a modified tropical or subtropical climate To the east the Highveld s border is marked by the Great Escarpment or the Mpumalanga Drakensberg but in the other directions the boundary is not obvious and often arbitrary The blesbok and quagga were among the large animals that once roamed on the highveld in great numbers Nowadays there still is a sizeable population of springbok in some areas 8 though much of the area is devoted to Balls farming and South Africa s largest conurbation Gauteng Province Lowveld edit The lowlands below about 500 m 1 640 ft altitude along South Africa s northern border with Botswana and Zimbabwe where a 180 million year old failed rift valley cuts into Southern Africa s central plateau and locally obliterates the Great Escarpment 9 10 is known as the Lowveld 11 The Limpopo and Save rivers run from the central African highlands via the Lowveld into the Indian Ocean to the east The Limpopo Lowveld extends southwards east of the Drakensberg escarpment through Mpumalanga Province and ultimately into eastern Eswatini This southern limb of the Lowveld is bounded by South Africa s border with Mozambique to the east and the north eastern part of the Drakensberg to the west 12 This region is generally hotter and less intensely cultivated than the Highveld Until the mid 20th century the Lowveld was still infested by the tsetse fly which transmits the sleeping sickness called nagana among the Zulus 13 Thornveld edit Thornveld also thorn veld or thornveldt often referred to as acacia thornveld is a type of semi arid savanna in which grassland with thorny acacia and certain species of thorny bushes predominate The predominant plant species are usually different in the thornveld of the plains or in the hill thornveld where for example species of genus Balanites are common 14 Some of the characteristic species 15 in the thornveld include Grasses Grass species belonging to genus Themeda and Hyparrhenia Trees and bushes Genus Acacia and Rhus such as Acacia caffra Acacia sieberiana and Rhus pentheri and other species like Ziziphus mucronata Ehretia rigida and Cussonia spicata Sandveld and Hardveld edit nbsp A calf in the Sandveld in Botswana nbsp Bakwena Royal Cemetery Molepolole in the Hardveld area of southeast BotswanaSandveld edit Sandveld in the general sense of the word is a type of veld characterised by dry sandy soil typical of certain areas of the Southern African region It usually absorbs all water from the seasonal rains although aquatic habitats largely seasonal may be also found in specific places in the sandveld 16 Only certain hardy plant species thrive in the sandveld environment These consist especially of grasses forming clumps and certain kinds of trees and shrubs 17 The sandveld vegetation has a particular pattern of growth rarely covering the whole terrain and thus leaving patches of sandy soil exposed on the surface Some of the typical sandveld species are Acacia haematoxylon A luederitzii Boscia albitrunca Terminalia sericea Lonchocarpus nelsii Bauhinia petersiana and Baphia massaiensis Hardveld edit Hardveld is a term applied to certain areas of rocky soils in Botswana located mostly in the eastern part of the country The landscape is an undulating plain with scattered rocky hill ranges There are areas of hardveld also in South Africa in the mountainous central Kamiesberg of the Northern Cape with hilly escarpments and deep river valleys The soil of the hardveld is characterised by rocky outcrops as well as an abundance of stones and pebbles of different shapes and sizes The flora of the hardveld is typical of rocky savanna with denser vegetation and thus less denuded patches than in the sandveld as well as taller trees 18 There is also a higher diversity of species in the hardveld compared with the sandveld Peltophorum africanum Acacia nigrescens A tortilis Combretum apiculatum and Colophospermum mopane are some of the representative species of the northern hardveld 19 See also editBushveld Highveld Kruger National Park Lowveld Outback Pasture Plain RangelandReferences edit Southern Africa bushveld Terrestrial Ecoregions World Wildlife Fund Winkel Lammert Allard te De grondbeginselen der Nederlandsche spelling Regelen der spelling voor het Woordenboek der Nederlandsche Taal Publisher D Noothoven van Goor 1873 Download from 1 Eric Anderson Walker ed The Cambridge History of the British Empire Volume 4 Cambridge University Press 1963 Afrikaans pp 890 894 Berger Iris South Africa in World History Oxford University Press 2009 ISBN 978 0195337938 Lemma velt Middelnederlandsch Woordenboek Dutch Language Union Lemma felt Oudnederlands Woordenboek Dutch Language Union Atlas of Southern Africa 1984 p 13 Reader s Digest Association Cape Town Richard Despard Estes The Behavior Guide to African Mammals University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 27297 2 McCarthy t amp Rubidge B 2005 The Story of Earth amp Life p 246 247 Struik Publishers Cape Town McCarthy T S 2013 The Okavango delta and its place in the geomorphological evolution of southern Africa South African Journal of Geology 116 1 54 Atlas of Southern Africa 1984 pp 13 192 195 Reader s Digest Association Cape Town Atlas of Southern Africa 1984 pp 13 182 192 Reader s Digest Association Cape Town Steverding Dietmar 2008 The history of African trypanosomiasis Parasites amp Vectors 1 1 3 doi 10 1186 1756 3305 1 3 ISSN 1756 3305 PMC 2270819 PMID 18275594 Thorn Veld Ecozone Kruger National Park Ecotravel co za Archived from the original on 11 May 2012 Retrieved 31 October 2012 KwaZulu Natal Department of Agriculture Mixed Thornveld Ecozone Agriculture kzntl gov za Archived from the original on 1 July 2012 Retrieved 31 October 2012 Aquatic Ecosystems of the Sandveld Saldanha PDF Archived from the original PDF on 20 July 2011 Retrieved 31 October 2012 Thamnochortus bachmannii PlantZAfrica com Retrieved 31 October 2012 Microsoft Word ORIG Basin Profile doc PDF Retrieved 31 October 2012 permanent dead link FAO Country Pasture Forage Resource Profiles Botswana Fao org Archived from the original on 15 September 2012 Retrieved 31 October 2012 External links edit nbsp Look up veld in Wiktionary the free dictionary Jacobs Nancy 2000 Grasslands and Thickets Bush Encroachment and Herding in the Kalahari Thornveld Environment and History 6 3 289 316 doi 10 3197 096734000129342316 JSTOR 20723144 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Veld amp oldid 1186925914, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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