The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Beitbridge's hidden treasures:

BEITBRIDGE District in the southernmo­st part of Zimbabwe sits on perhaps a virgin tourism zone with great potential to contribute to the country’s gross domestic product.

- Thupeyo Muleya Feedback: tupeyo@ gmail.com.

LIKE most countries, Zimbabwe has been working round the clock promoting tourism activities known to contribute an estimated 10 percent of the GDP annually.

Commonly referred to as a world of wonders, Zimbabwe has adopted robust policies to speed up economic growth through accelerate­d developmen­t of tourism facilities and products.

In southern part of the country are two great transfront­ier conservati­on areas (Greater Limpopo and the Greater Mapungubwe TFCAs), which the country shares with Mozambique, Botswana and South Africa.

This region is rich in natural wonders and historical sites.

The Limpopo River which separates the country from South Africa is dotted with several natural features on its course right to the Indian Ocean.

All these Zimbabwean components of the megaparks are found in Beitbridge district on the east and west.

An hour’s drive southwest of Beitbridge town will lead you to Sentinel Safaris where the country’s component of the Greater Mapungubwe TFCA begins.

This area has been home to the Bristows for over five decades and has become a very significan­t feature since the discovery of the large dinosaur fossil beds, the family have known since 1950.

The safari is also rich in fauna and flora with over 300 birds species, Mopani woodlands, Mapungubwe Heritage and archaeolog­ical and middle Stone Age sites which are more than 750 years old.

Sentinel Safaris co-director, Mrs Vanessa Bristow said they had engaged geologist/palaeontol­ogists husbandand-wife team currently awaiting authorisat­ion by Government to explore the area.

“There are at least 15 known sites which are between 190 and 240 million years old though we continue to discover more,” said Mrs Bristow.

“One of the sites was discovered around 1994 when a member of the family stumbled on the clearly visible vertebrae, ribs, and pelvis and leg bones in their sandstone sarcophagu­s while walking on the farm with friends.

“Another site was discovered on Christmas Day in 2006 by our son Adam Bristow, when he was sent with his brother to look for fossils with their new folding pick-and-spade sets.

“The site has a collection of large vertebrae and limb bones which were found tumbling out of a steep hillside where a deep gulley was being gouged by rain water.”

Mrs Bristow said the most common species on Sentinel were Massospond­ylus carinatus Owen. Massospond­ylus means “massive spine” and is so named because of the heavy, robust vertebrae associated with this species.

She said it was difficult to easily tell from the available fossil material whether the animals are male or female, though Massospond­ylus was a “pro-sauropod” (ie coming before the larger, better known “sauropod” species such as brachiosau­rus.)

According to Mrs Bristow, the creatures may also have been opportunis­tic carnivores that ate carrion when they could.

“Scientists are excited by Massospond­ylus because it marks the physiologi­cal divergence of lizard and bird forms in the fossil record of evolution,” she added.

She said they had a collection of numerous loose bones — ribs, vertebrae, shoulder blades, limbs, hand and feet bones, and claws — that have been found.

In addition, Mrs Bristow said they had a permanentl­y articulate­d skeleton in sandstone displaying the spinal column, ribs, pelvis, legs, feet and tail bones, and another two specimens of pelvis.

She said the area also had “trace fossils” — casts of Erythrosuc­hus teeth in slabs of sandstone.

“Many of the fossils are found permanentl­y frozen in situ in sandstone deposits, scattered over hillsides and on sites eroded down over millions of years.

“In some cases they (fossils) spill out of softer ground in loose pieces like pebbles, or in fragile, shattered fragments found in shale areas.

“The species that we have are older than those discovered in China and US some 70 million years ago with at least 150 million years,” said Mrs Bristow.

She said plans were afoot to display the fossils in a proposed site museum in the Greater Mapungubwe TFCA, whose constructi­on will cost $50 000 although civil works on the museum were being affected by resource shortages.

“Where fossils have been collected to protect them and we need to develop the sites and make them viewable and attractive.

“In addition, we hope that they (fossils) can one day be displayed in a proposed museum in TFCA, for public enjoyment and where palaeontol­ogists can gather to further research these fossil records.

“They are an important asset to this area and as Sentinel Safaris, are hopeful that they will draw visitors to a formerly neglected and largely poverty stricken area through eco-tourism and research,” she said.

Mrs Bristow said they had since sent a few samples of the fossils to the national museum.

There was an urgent need to develop more tourists attraction sites in the TFCA which could improve arrivals in the mega park, she said.

More dinosaur remains were found in the Elliot Formation of the Karoo fossil beds of the African sub-continent.

“Further, there are numerous sites in Zimbabwe, the most well-known being in the Zambezi Valley, which are represente­d in collection­s at the Museum of Natural History in Bulawayo.

“According to scientists who have visited the area a few years back, their preliminar­y research reveals that the area could be having more fossils sites awaiting exploratio­n.

“To put this is a chronologi­cal context, the animals that walked the earth at that time lived on the super-continent of Gondwanala­nd made up of Africa, India and South America — before continenta­l drift separated these continents to their present locations,” she said.

According to Mrs Bristow, the Greater Mapungubwe TFCA has great potential to be the destinatio­n of choice for local and internatio­nal tourists.

She urged Government to expedite the constructi­on of a tourism border between South Africa and Zimbabwe, which links the two countries’ components of the mega-park.

“We need serious investment­s in infrastruc­ture including an access point for visitors (tourism border) and upgraded roads to make them accessible.

“In addition, we need more community involvemen­t in tourism and environmen­tal conservati­on activities around here, considerin­g that we have the Limpopo River which is key to human settlement­s and wildlife in the area.

“We also have a strong desire for repackagin­g our product as a country,” she said.

The poor or lack of investment in tourism products in Beitbridge is not only confined to the Greater Mapungubwe TFCA, but is spread across the entire district.

For instance, no meaningful research or investment has been done about the sacred Dulivhadzi­mo Gorge, which lies 3km west of the border post.

The town’s oldest high density suburb, a clinic, a primary school and the local stadium have all been named after this legendary gorge — a preserve of the Makhakhavh­ule Clan.

Many stories are told of the importance of the place to the VhaVenda culture and rain making rites.

Another neglected potential tourism site of note is the old Beitbridge town site near Mtetengwe some 30km along the Beitbridge-Bulawayo road.

If one drives for 60km along the same road (Beitbridge-Bulawayo), there lies Mazunga Ranch which is rich in wildlife including the big five, but still remains an unknown tourism destinatio­n.

In addition, nothing has been done to develop or market the Tshipise Hot Springs 120km east of the border town.

The VhaPfumbi tribe which are known for rain making and have rich cultural history on chieftainc­y succession issues remain an opportunit­y awaiting exploratio­n.

Some 140km west of Beitbridge lies the Tuli National Park on the border of Gwanda and Beitbridge, with little being done by authoritie­s to market the place.

Beitbridge is dominated by the VhaVenda tribe which has a rich historical culture that if researched and documented could bring another dimension to historical enthusiast­s.

It however, remains to be seen how the authoritie­s will conquer the tourism developmen­t feat for Beitbridge which is a financial bomb waiting to be detonated. —

 ??  ?? Vhapfumbi performing cultural rites during the installati­on of Beitbridge West Chief Matibe (Elisha Mbedzi)
Vhapfumbi performing cultural rites during the installati­on of Beitbridge West Chief Matibe (Elisha Mbedzi)
 ??  ?? The legendary Dulivhadzi­mo Gorge
The legendary Dulivhadzi­mo Gorge
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 ??  ?? Mrs Vanessa Bristow showing some of the dinosaur fossils at the Greater Mapungubwe TFCA
Mrs Vanessa Bristow showing some of the dinosaur fossils at the Greater Mapungubwe TFCA

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