The ground beneath our feet: A critical reflection on 135 years of landscape evolution models for southern Africa

Rivoningo Khosa, Vela Mbele, Kelly Kirsten, Robyn Pickering

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Abstract

In his 1925 paper describing the Taung Child fossil, Dart makes various assertions about the landscape around Taung, inferring past climate dynamics, and the role these factors play in the evolution of our early prehuman relatives. He argues that this region of southern Africa is dry today and has been for much of the Cenozoic. This notion of long-term aridity and stability has dominated perspectives on southern African landscape evolution. Here, we present a review of this field, starting with the foundational studies from the late 1890s, which underpin Dart’s hypothesis. We examine the work of 20th-century researchers who developed models of landscape evolution; however, almost all of these models have been qualitative. With technological advancements, new quantitative techniques have emerged to provide evidence of landscape evolution events and to test previous models, and we present a brief overview of these methods. We call for reflection on the framing and languaging of many of these landscape models, specifically the ‘African land surface’ model. While the evidence of a homogeneous and stable landscape is continually being challenged through scientific advancement, this terminology is rooted in outdated colonial thinking. We also note that the key narratives that have driven research on landscape evolution have been largely shaped by selected prominent Western-based scientists. As we mark the centenary of the Taung discovery, we look toward a new era of landscape evolution research: one characterised by technological advancements and more diverse, local teams that will produce more quantitative, nuanced models for southern Africa and create richer, more dynamic backdrops for our own human evolution.
Original languageEnglish
Article number#18532
Number of pages8
JournalSouth African Journal of Science
Volume121
Issue number1/2
Early online date7 Feb 2025
DOIs
Publication statusE-pub ahead of print - 7 Feb 2025

Bibliographical note

This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative
Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/),
which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium,
provided the original work is properly cited.

Funding

South African National Research Foundation (98920,120806), University of Cape Town We thank Jan Kramers, Stephen Tooth and John Hancox for stimulating our interest in landscape evolution and for help in directing us to some of the older literature. Tyler Faith and Judy Sealy are thanked for ensuring the safe delivery of an out-of-print book that was invaluable in putting this review together. This research contributes towards the output of the Biogeochemistry Research Infrastructure Platform (BIOGRIP), supported by the Department of Science and Innovation, South Africa. We acknowledge support from the National Research Foundation of South Africa (NRF)-iThemba LABS and the NRF CSUR (grant number 98920). Furthermore, we acknowledge the Advancing Womxn by Womxn Meritorious Award from the University of Cape Town (R.K., R.P.) and the University of Cape Town Vice Chancellor\u2019s 2030 Leadership grant (R.P., K.K.), as well as the NRF CPRR (grant number 120806, R.P.).

FundersFunder number
University of Cape Town
Department of Science and Innovation
National Research Foundation98920,120806
National Research Foundation98920
National Research Foundation120806

    Keywords

    • landscape evolution
    • landscape reconstruction
    • African land surface
    • surface dating

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