4.4 Article

Mining on the frontier: Archaeological excavation of the historical component at Canteen Kopje, Northern Cape Province, South Africa

Journal

QUATERNARY INTERNATIONAL
Volume 614, Issue -, Pages 146-163

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.quaint.2021.07.019

Keywords

Historical archaeology; Canteen Kopje; Vaal alluvial diggings; Quagga; Colonial frontier; Tswana pottery

Funding

  1. Canadian Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council
  2. University of Toronto Research Excursion Program

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This article presents the results of excavation at Canteen Kopje, revealing a combination of European manufactured ceramics and glass with locally made objects, as well as material culture associated with remains of wild animals. The study argues that the early Vaal River diamond diggings represent a stage of extractive economies in southern Africa, indicating a lack of rigid control over space and people at that time.
Canteen Kopje was a prominent location within the spread of nineteenth century mining camps at Klipdrift along the Vaal River. This article presents the results of excavation of the historical component of Canteen Kopje that produced an artifact assemblage in which European manufactured ceramics and glass are associated with objects of local manufacture, which attests to the cultural interaction that took place in the context of early mining. These finds of material culture are associated with a faunal assemblage of wild animals primarily the remains of quagga, a species that was soon to go in extinct. Based on historical documentation and pictorial representation it is argued that the earliest Vaal River diamond diggings here represent a stage of extractive economies in southern Africa when the rigid control of space and people that emerged subsequently was not yet fully developed.

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