State of the Planet

News from the Columbia Climate School

Author: Jill A. VanTongeren


  • Pricker Bushes, South African Barbeque and New Friends

    Pricker Bushes, South African Barbeque and New Friends

    On Friday, we decided to revisit an area we had already been to.  This section covers the contact between the Bushveld rocks (green, colors as seen on the map) and the leptite (purple), granophyre (yellow) and granite (pink) rocks that we are interested in.  What the map doesn’t show is topography.  Pink granite can be very resistant, meaning it…

  • Rock Hunting Before River Closes In

    Rock Hunting Before River Closes In

    On Tuesday we drove to the Steelpoort River Valley, about a hundred kilometers away. Work on a new dam and road has begun since we were here last, in 2006 and 2007. Once it’s finished, the dam will flood much of our field area, submerging some of the rocks we are studying. It’s a good thing…

  • Geology with a Taste of Safari

    Geology with a Taste of Safari

    We started the morning with breakfast and shopping for lunch provisions. We bought a large bag of oranges grown in the groves that surround this region for the equivalent of $1.50, along with cheese and, of course, biltong. The butcher offered many kinds of biltong, from the shaved, proscuitto-like variety to the serious cowboy jerky…

  • Rock Collecting While Watching for Crocodiles, Leopards

    Rock Collecting While Watching for Crocodiles, Leopards

    On Saturday morning, Ed and I left Pretoria for the next phase of our trip: field work near the Loskop Dam in Mpumalanga Province where a large volcano once existed about two billion years ago. No one has been able to find where this ancient volcano stood but lava flows in the area suggest there…

  • Singing, Clapping, Smiling over Geology in S. Africa

    Singing, Clapping, Smiling over Geology in S. Africa

    After a morning lecture about the Bushveld Complex and the processes of concentrating ores in magma bodies, Ed and I had to go to the University of Pretoria for Thursday afternoon. I was invited to give a lecture and we were able to have some very interesting conversations about Bushveld research with the people who…

  • Diamond Mine Field Trip on Despite Strike

    Diamond Mine Field Trip on Despite Strike

     We woke up Wednesday morning to find out that all unionized government workers, including public school teachers, were on strike. All schools were shuttered and we worried that no one would show up for our workshop. But we arrived at class to find all of our teachers present. They told us this was a once…

  • Getting Underneath South Africa’s Mineral Wealth

    Getting Underneath South Africa’s Mineral Wealth

    Our teaching workshop continued Tuesday with a lecture about mineral resources and their economic importance. South Africa has abundant platinum and gold but also lesser-known elements like vanadium, chromium, and manganese. Vanadium and chromium, important to the steel industry, are found predominantly in the Bushveld Complex where our research is focused. Chromium gives steel much…

  • New York City Rocks Spark Cultural Exchange

    New York City Rocks Spark Cultural Exchange

    The workshop that we are here leading is designed to help South Africa high school teachers make geology come alive for their students. We want to share basic concepts, such as how rocks and minerals form, but also provide activities and materials that can make the concepts more accessible. In planning the workshop, we outlined…

  • Discovering Biltong, Brooklyn, in South Africa

    Discovering Biltong, Brooklyn, in South Africa

    We arrived in the city of Tshwane (formerly named Pretoria) on Sunday after a day-long journey from New York. Tshwane is the executive capitol of South Africa and according to several locals we met while walking through the city, home to the most national embassies after Washington D.C. More importantly, Tshwane is where the U.S.…

  • Pricker Bushes, South African Barbeque and New Friends

    Pricker Bushes, South African Barbeque and New Friends

    On Friday, we decided to revisit an area we had already been to.  This section covers the contact between the Bushveld rocks (green, colors as seen on the map) and the leptite (purple), granophyre (yellow) and granite (pink) rocks that we are interested in.  What the map doesn’t show is topography.  Pink granite can be very resistant, meaning it…

  • Rock Hunting Before River Closes In

    Rock Hunting Before River Closes In

    On Tuesday we drove to the Steelpoort River Valley, about a hundred kilometers away. Work on a new dam and road has begun since we were here last, in 2006 and 2007. Once it’s finished, the dam will flood much of our field area, submerging some of the rocks we are studying. It’s a good thing…

  • Geology with a Taste of Safari

    Geology with a Taste of Safari

    We started the morning with breakfast and shopping for lunch provisions. We bought a large bag of oranges grown in the groves that surround this region for the equivalent of $1.50, along with cheese and, of course, biltong. The butcher offered many kinds of biltong, from the shaved, proscuitto-like variety to the serious cowboy jerky…

  • Rock Collecting While Watching for Crocodiles, Leopards

    Rock Collecting While Watching for Crocodiles, Leopards

    On Saturday morning, Ed and I left Pretoria for the next phase of our trip: field work near the Loskop Dam in Mpumalanga Province where a large volcano once existed about two billion years ago. No one has been able to find where this ancient volcano stood but lava flows in the area suggest there…

  • Singing, Clapping, Smiling over Geology in S. Africa

    Singing, Clapping, Smiling over Geology in S. Africa

    After a morning lecture about the Bushveld Complex and the processes of concentrating ores in magma bodies, Ed and I had to go to the University of Pretoria for Thursday afternoon. I was invited to give a lecture and we were able to have some very interesting conversations about Bushveld research with the people who…

  • Diamond Mine Field Trip on Despite Strike

    Diamond Mine Field Trip on Despite Strike

     We woke up Wednesday morning to find out that all unionized government workers, including public school teachers, were on strike. All schools were shuttered and we worried that no one would show up for our workshop. But we arrived at class to find all of our teachers present. They told us this was a once…

  • Getting Underneath South Africa’s Mineral Wealth

    Getting Underneath South Africa’s Mineral Wealth

    Our teaching workshop continued Tuesday with a lecture about mineral resources and their economic importance. South Africa has abundant platinum and gold but also lesser-known elements like vanadium, chromium, and manganese. Vanadium and chromium, important to the steel industry, are found predominantly in the Bushveld Complex where our research is focused. Chromium gives steel much…

  • New York City Rocks Spark Cultural Exchange

    New York City Rocks Spark Cultural Exchange

    The workshop that we are here leading is designed to help South Africa high school teachers make geology come alive for their students. We want to share basic concepts, such as how rocks and minerals form, but also provide activities and materials that can make the concepts more accessible. In planning the workshop, we outlined…

  • Discovering Biltong, Brooklyn, in South Africa

    Discovering Biltong, Brooklyn, in South Africa

    We arrived in the city of Tshwane (formerly named Pretoria) on Sunday after a day-long journey from New York. Tshwane is the executive capitol of South Africa and according to several locals we met while walking through the city, home to the most national embassies after Washington D.C. More importantly, Tshwane is where the U.S.…