Rietvlei Natural Springs
Rietvlei Nature Reserve belongs to the City of Tshwane
Metropolitan Municipality and was established to supply the city
with clean drinking water. The dam and a part of its catchment area
were proclaimed as a nature reserve and are managed as such.
The supply of clean drinking water and the protection of the
catchment area are the main reasons for the establishment and
maintenance of the reserve. There are three sources of water on the
reserve, namely the dam with its purification plant below the dam
wall, five fountains and five boreholes. The reserve supplies about
15% of the city's drinking water, which equals about 40 million
liters of water a day.
Geology of Rietvlei Nature Reserve
As far as geology is concerned the eastern portion of the reserve
is mainly made up of dolomite and chert. The central portions, from
north to south consist of andesitic lava with agglomerate, shale
and tuff layered in between. The western ridges portion is mainly
shale, siltstone and some places quartzite and grit stone on top
with layers of tillite and limestone. Between the lava and dolomite
there are also strips of shale and quartzite ridges. Many sinkholes
can be found in the eastern dolomite portions of the reserve.
The most prominent feature of the soils on the reserve is the
fact that it is so shallow. The limiting layers are mainly lava,
quartzite, diabase or dolerite. The soils are also very prone to
erosion.
Due to the fact of the nearby sinkholes in the dolomite area,
the water of the springs was not completely subjected to ground
filtering and thus resulted in the fact that the water is not as
clean as what it used to be many years ago before the sinkholes
appeared.
Only one of the springs in the Rietvlei Nature Reserve is
Perennial (continuous) and the other three are Ephemeral
(intermittent) and will deliver water in the high rainfall
season.
Natural Springs:
A spring is a point where groundwaterflows out of the ground, and
is thus where the aquifersurface meets the ground surface.
Dependent upon the constancy of the water source, a spring may be
ephemeral (intermittent) or perennial (continuous). Water issuing
from an artesian spring may rise to a higher elevation than the top
of the aquifer from which it issues. When water issues from the
ground it may form into a pool or flow downhill, in surface
streams.
Minerals become dissolved in the water as it moves through the
underground rocks. This gives the water flavor and even carbon
dioxidebubbles, depending upon the nature of the geologythrough
which it passes. Springs that contain significant amounts of
minerals are sometimes called 'mineral springs'. Springs that
contain large amounts of dissolved sodiumsalts, mostly sodium
carbonate, are called 'soda springs'.
Types of springs:
Water which emerges at the surface naturally with a distinct
current is called a spring. When a distinct current is not present,
the flow is called a seep. Most springs and seeps represent water
from rain or snow on some nearby higher ground which moves
underground to where it comes up out of the ground. Its underground
course depends on the type of soil it moves through. In some
springs, the water bubbles up with a measurable force, indicating
that it is under pressure, these are called artesian springs. Any
spring having a temperature higher than the yearly average
temperature for a given region is termed a thermal spring. This
indicates a source of heat other than that of the surface climate,
of which magmatic heat is an example. Based upon the pressure of
the emergent water, any spring or seep which is not artesian may be
classified as the gravity type. Gravity springs and seeps are those
in which subsurface water flows by gravity from a high point of
intake to a lower point of issue. The two most important
type’s are;
• Water table springs and seeps, which occur where the water
table comes near or intersects the surface of the ground.
• Contact springs and seeps, which occur along an exposed
contact point, like along a hillside. Water table springs and seeps
are normally found around the margin of depressions, along the
slope of valleys, and at the foot of alluvial fans. Contact springs
appear along slopes but may be found at almost any elevation,
depending on the position of the rock formations.
Classifications:
In the past all the springs in the Rietvlei Reserve delivered
second Magnitude, but due to the extra bore holes that were
drilled, only one spring still delivers water today at a rate of
third Magnitude. A second spring close to the road inside the
reserve only produces water in the summer and dries out during the
long winter months. Springs are often classified by the volume of
the water they discharge. The largest springs are called
"first-magnitude," defined as springs that discharge water at a
rate of at least 100 cubic feet per second. The scale for spring
flow is as follows:
• 1st Magnitude - > 2800 L/s
• 2nd Magnitude – 280 to 2800 L/s
• 3rd Magnitude – 28 to 280 L/s
• 4th Magnitude - 6.3 to 28 L/s
• 5th Magnitude - 0.63 to 6.3 L/s
• 6th Magnitude - 63 to 630 mL/s
• 7th Magnitude - 8 to 63 mL/s
• 8th Magnitude - 8 mL/s
• 0 Magnitude – no flow
The strange values in Liters per second are due to the original
scale was done in gallons and feet per second having 1s 10s and
100s; thus round decimal figures.
Please note the rules on the reserve:
• The public is requested to stay in their vehicles and they
are only allowed to get out at the picnic site and bird hides at
their own risk.
• The speed limit is 30 km/h and some of the roads are closed
to the public mainly because they go to the fences or are
inaccessible with normal vehicles.
• No pets are allowed.
• Fires are only permitted at the picnic sites.
Acknowledgements:
City of Tshwane Agriculture and environmental Management
department.
To qualify for logging this cache, please answer of the
questions listed below in a e-mail to the cache owner:
1. The listed waypoint will take you around the corner on the
boardwalk to a strange object at the end of the path. What do you
think is the purpose of this structure?
2. The Fern Fountain bird hide was build over the Natural spring
outlet, and thus no visible water flow out of the earth can be
witnessed, but the water flow can clearly be heard as it flows out
over rocks under the hide. Can you see where the water enters the
wetland and estimate the rate of the water flow?
3. Looking at the area and geological formations around the
Reserve; is this spring a artesian springs or does the water moves
with gravity to the spring outlet, and what will be the main
mineral found in the water?