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Tugela River

 

Principal river, KwaZulu-Natal province, South Africa. It rises in the Mont-aux-Sources plateau and hurtles 3,110 ft (948 m) down a series of waterfalls to cut through Tugela Gorge. It ends its 312-mi (502-km) course at the Indian Ocean. It was the scene of battles in the South African War in 1899 – 1900. Historically, the Tugela marked the southern boundary of Zululand.

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Wikipedia: Tugela River
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Tugela
Thukela
River
The Tugela River with the Amphitheatre in the background
Country South Africa
Province KwaZulu-Natal
Towns Bergville, Colenso
Landmarks Tugela Falls, Rorke's Drift, Fort Tenedos
Source
 - location Drakensberg
Mouth Indian Ocean
Length 502 km (312 mi)
Basin 29,100 km2 (11,236 sq mi)
The course of the Tugela river, from the west to the east border of KwaZulu-Natal.
Note: Tugela redirects here. For the Australian racehorse named after the river, see Tugela (horse).

The Tugela River (also known as Thukela) is the largest river in KwaZulu-Natal Province, South Africa. The river originates in the Drakensberg Mountains, Mont-aux-Sources, (itself the source of tributaries of two other major South African rivers, the Orange River and the Vaal River) and plunges 947 metres down the Tugela Falls. From the Drakensberg range the river meanders for 502 kilometres (312 mi) through the KwaZulu-Natal midlands before flowing into the Indian Ocean.[1] The total catchment area is approximately 29,100 square kilometres (11,200 sq mi).[1] Land uses in the catchment are mainly rural subsistence farming and commercial forestry.

Transfer schemes

There are a number of large inter-basin transfer schemes responsible for transferring water from the Tugela basin across the escarpment into the Vaal River system. The main scheme is the Drakensberg Pumped Storage Scheme operated by Eskom. There is also the original pumping station at Jagersrus.

British troops crossing the river during the Second Boer War

Course

The Tugela passes Bergville and Colenso, the latter the site of an important battle in the Second Boer War and for many years the site of the first major power station in Natal. The power station was built by the South African Railways to electrify the railway line north from Pietermaritzburg. It was coal-fired and the cooling water came from the Tugela.

Below the Buffalo confluence the Tugela flows southeast in a deep channel between cliffs and valleys until it reaches the narrow coast belt. Its mouth is nearly closed by a sand bar, formed by the action of the ocean. The Tugela is thus not navigable. It is generally fordable in the winter months, but after the heavy rains of summer, it however becomes a deep and rapid river.

Tugela mouth

The area near the mouth is known for a number of historical sites and events. The first European visitor to the vicinity was Vasco da Gama on December 28, 1497. He named a certain cape near this area Ponta da Pescaria, due to the number of fish they caught here. Portuguese survivors of the São Bento (Saint Benedict) shipwreck reached the river on June 1, 1554, and one of their company, the aged Fernão Alvares Cabral, drowned while crossing.[2]

Near the John Ross bridge, 8km from the mouth, is the site of the historic Zulu village Ndondakusuka. In 1838 Robert Biggar and John Cane fell here in the Battle of the Tugela when opposed by superior Zulu forces of Dingane. In 1856 a major battle, the Battle of Ndondakusuka was fought nearby, and 23,000 died, when Mpande's sons Mbuyazwe and Cetshwayo vied for supremacy.

About 10km above the mouth are two historic forts, Fort Pearson and Fort Tenedos, built by the British in 1879 during the Anglo-Zulu War, to guard the passage of the river. Near Fort Pearson is also a fig tree, the so-called Ultimatum Tree, now protected in the Harold Johnson Nature Reserve. Here the British delivered an ultimatum to Cetshwayo's chiefs as an excuse for the war.

The John Ross bridge is situated on the old N2 route, since replaced by the North Coast Toll Road which passes 3km from the mouth. The bridge is named after John Ross, who at the age of 15 walked to Maputo and back to procure medicine. The John Ross bridge collapsed in the September 1987 floods and was rebuilt subsequently.[3]

Tributaries

The Tugela has a number of tributaries coming off the Drakensberg, the largest being the Mzinyathi ("Buffalo") River (rising near Majuba Hill), but also the Little Tugela River, Klip River (rising near Van Reenen Pass), Mooi River, Blood River, Sundays River (rising in the Biggarsberg) Ingagani River and Bushmans River.[1] The Buffalo River joins the Tugela some 19 kilometres (12 mi) east of Tugela Ferry at 28°43′04″S 30°38′41″E / 28.71778°S 30.64472°E / -28.71778; 30.64472.

The Blood River is so named due to the defeat of the Zulu king Dingane, on 16 December 1838, by the Boers under Andries Pretorius, when the river is said to have run red with the blood of the Zulus. Below the Blood River is Rorke's Drift, a crossing point and another battle site, this time from the Anglo-Zulu War.

See also

Dams on the Tugela

Notes

  1. ^ a b c "Proposal to establishment a Catchment Management Agency for the Thukela Water Management Area - Appendix A". Department of Water Affairs and Forestry. 2004-07. http://www.dwaf.gov.za/Documents/Other/CMA/Thukela/ThukelaAppendixA2.pdf. Retrieved 2008-10-21. 
  2. ^ De Kock, Willem Johannes (1957). Portugese ontdekkers om die Kaap. A.A. Balkema, Kaapstad. pp. 144, 166, 228. 
  3. ^ Bell, Frederic Gladstone (2004). Engineering Geology and Construction. Taylor & Francis. p. 398. ISBN 0415259398. 

External links

Coordinates: 28°45′00″S 28°53′45″E / 28.75°S 28.89583°E / -28.75; 28.89583


 
 
Learn More
Tugela Falls (series of five waterfalls)
KwaZulu-Natal (province, South Africa)
Zululand (region, South Africa/Zulu)

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Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. © 2006 Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
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