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  1. The Transvaal Basin is one of three basins of the Transvaal Supergroup on the Kaapvaal craton. The evolution of this 2.65–2.05 Ga Neoarchaean – Palaeoproterozoic basin is thought to have been derived largely from magmatism, palaeoclimate and eustasy, while plate tectonics played an intermittent role. The supergroup is made up of basal ...

  2. May 29, 2017 · Géologie de la République Sud-Africaine du Transvaal [Geology of the Republic of South Africa and the Transvaal], G.A.F. Molengraaff, Bulletin de la Société Géologique de France, Ser. 4, Vol. 1, pp. 13-92, (1898). The author reviews the geological setting of the Transvaal diamond mines.

  3. May 18, 2023 · The Transvaal Republic formed after Dutch-speaking settlers to South Africa left Britain’s Cape Colony in the mid-1800s in order to live independently of Britain. Calling themselves voortrekkers (pioneers), but also known as Boers, their Great Trek is part of the founding story of South African colonization.

  4. Jan 1, 1990 · The 2500-2100 Ma Transvaal Sequence of South Africa comprises 15,000 m of relatively unmetamorphosed volcanic, clastic and chemical sedimentary rocks. Protobasinal clastic sediments and basaltic to rhyolitic volcanics are ascribed to fluvial deposition and subaerial extrusion. These units grade into the dolomites of the Chuniespoort Group ...

  5. RM 2FM6RNR – Gold digging, Transvaal, South Africa, about 1900. RM A160H5 – Mango fruit on the tree variety Sensation Transvaal South Africa. RF P7D1A5 – Vintage 1911 Photograph of Inspector, Superintendant and Sergeants of The Western Transvaal Police. RM DDED9Y – A FERRY ON THE VAAL RIVER, TRANSVAAL, SOUTH AFRICA.

  6. The Transvaal is the northern area of South Africa and used to be one of the four provinces. Today it is no longer in existence and has been divided into four separate provinces: Gauteng, North West, Mpumalanga and Limpopo. Gauteng is the smallest province in South Africa but also the wealthiest. The main cities are Johannesburg and Pretoria ...

  7. Ou Raadsaal, Pretoria The Volksraad of the South African Republic (English: "People's Council" of the South African Republic, Afrikaans : Volksraad van die Zuid-Afrikaansche Republiek ) was the parliament of the former South African Republic (ZAR), it existed from 1840 [1] to 1877, [2] and from 1881 to 1902 [3] in part of what is now South Africa .