Hakskeenpan

Hakskeenpan
Hakskeenpan
Coordinates: 26°49′22.88″S 20°08′17.58″E / 26.8230222°S 20.1382167°E / -26.8230222; 20.1382167Coordinates: 26°49′22.88″S 20°08′17.58″E / 26.8230222°S 20.1382167°E / -26.8230222; 20.1382167
Country South Africa
Province Northern Cape
Region Mier
Altitude 801 meters (2,628 ft)
Time zone UTC+2 (SAST)

Hakskeenpan is a mud and salt pan in the Kalahari Desert, in Southern Africa. It is located in the Mier region in the Northern Cape Province, in South Africa, at 801 meters (2,628 ft) above sea level.[1] The pan covers an area of approximately 140 km2 (54mi2).[2]

Formation, geology and climate

Long-Term Landscape Evolution

The present day Kalahari landscape—essentially an inland sand sea sitting within an uplifted sedimentary basin—is the result of a variety of interacting tectonic and geomorphological processes that have operated over considerable timescales. The initial development of the Kalahari was closely linked to the evolution of the African landmass following the break-up of the supercontinent Gondwanaland [3] during the Mesozoic. The gradual separation of Africa from present-day Australia, Antarctica, India and South America was associated with progressive heating and rifting of the crust, which led to the uplift of the southern African continental margin in the mid- to Late Cretaceous. The development of this uplifted margin had significant implications for regional fluvial systems; the end product was a dual drainage pattern consisting primarily of short rivers draining directly into the sea off the Great Escarpment and longer rivers draining inland and never reaching the sea.[4]

Pan Environments

Pans are small, closed basins or depressions that contain seasonally flooded lakes and are characteristic of arid to semi-arid regions of low relief. They are also of considerable importance as point water sources for both humans and wildlife. Pans occur throughout the Kalahari, as far north as Zambia, but are a particularly significant component of the landscape in regions with (i) an annual rainfall of less than 500 mm and (ii) underlying rock or sediment that is susceptible to erosion by the wind.[5] The southern Kalahari meets both of these criteria.[4]

Two areas containing concentrations of pans occur within the southern Kalahari: (i) a broad zone extending from Upington, across the lower Molopo and northwards into Namibia and (ii) a smaller area between Vryburg in North West Province and Tsabong in Botswana. Within these zones, pans occur as isolated landscape features but also within depressions in the floors of dry valleys and palaeodrainage lines, and in the corridors between linear dunes. The majority lack any surface inflow, although some may have short, poorly developed channels that supply run-off during major rainfall events.[3] Hakskeen Pan is one of the largest isolated pans in the South African Kalahari, the other notable one being Koppieskraal Pan immediately south-west of the Kgalagadi Transfrontier Park.[4]

Climate

The climate in the Southern Kalahari ecoregion is semi-arid. Temperatures fluctuate greatly, on both a seasonal and a daily basis, with mean maximum and minimum temperatures of 35,7 °C and 19,5 °C in January and 22,2 °C and 1,2 °C in July. Rainfall is unreliable and irregular, falling primarily during short-duration, high intensity thunderstorms between November and April. Before the rainy season begins, strong northwesterly winds blow between September and November, producing dust storms. Mean annual precipitation is approximately 223mm. Humidity is low and evaporation high, the latter resulting in the characteristically large deficit in the annual water budget. River water tends to be alkaline and turbid, but the rivers flow only briefly after rainfall, and rapid infiltration into the sandy Kalahari soil means that floods, although they do at times occur, are rare, and river flow ceases quickly[6]

Name

In Afrikaans "Hakskeen" means “heel”, which is probably a reference to the shape of the pan on a map.[7] "Pan" is the Afrikaans word for "dried lake".

Land Speed Records

Bloodhound SSC

The Bloodhound SSC team selected Hakskeen Pan to conduct their 1000 mph land speed record attempt after the rains in the Black Rock Desert failed so there was not enough water to wash the surface flat and the desert became the site of the Burning Man Festival which left deep scuff marks in the ground. After eliminating other sites which may be suitable for a land speed record attempt the team found Hakskeenpan which was selected due to its flat surface.[8] The track that Bloodhound SSC will run on at Hakskeen Pan is 1100 metres wide and 20 km long.[9]

The date for the first land speed record attempt (to improve on the current record of 763 mph) has been set to 2017. The aim of the Bloodhound project is to set a land speed record of 1000 mph; this attempt has been scheduled for 2018 while the team secures the funds to run Bloodhound on the specially prepared pan[10]

See also

References

  1. "Elevation". elevationmap.net. Retrieved 16 February 2016.
  2. Peter Jeremy Holmes (1 September 2012). Southern African Geomorphology: Recent Trends and New Directions. AFRICAN SUN MeDIA. pp. 158–. ISBN 978-1-920382-02-5.
  3. 1 2 Thomas, Shaw (1991). The Kalahari environment. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  4. 1 2 3 Nash, David (2015). Landscapes and Landforms of South Africa. Springer International Publishing. pp. 129–137. ISBN 978-3-319-03559-8.
  5. Goudie, Wells (1995). The nature, distribution and formation of pans in arid zones. Earth Sci Rev 38. pp. 1–69.
  6. Michele L. Thieme; Robin Abell; Neil Burgess; Bernhard Lehner; Eric Dinerstein; David Olson (5 April 2005). Freshwater Ecoregions of Africa and Madagascar: A Conservation Assessment. Island Press. p. 354. ISBN 978-1-59726-791-5.
  7. "Hakskeenpan Name". Media Club South Africa. Retrieved 16 February 2016.
  8. "Northern Cape to host attempt on world land speed record". Times LIVE. Retrieved 16 March 2016.
  9. "SA ready for 1610km/h speed record". IOL. Retrieved 16 March 2016.
  10. "Bloodhound land speed record bid delayed until 2017". BBC News. Retrieved 14 March 2016.
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