Swartberg Pass

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Wall of Fire, Swartberg Pass
Swartberg Pass
The Top the Swartberg Pass
Swartberg Pass
View North from the Top of the Pass
View South from the Top of the Pass
The Swartberg Mountains
Swartberg Pass

The spectacular [1] Swartberg Pass on the R328 run through the Swartberg mountain range (black mountain in English) which runs roughly east-west along the northern edge of the semi-arid area called the Little Karoo in the Western Cape province of South Africa.

The Swartberg is amongst the best exposed fold mountain chains in the world, and the pass slices through magnificently scenic geological formations.[2] To the north of the range lies the other large semi-arid area in South Africa, the Great Karoo. Much of the Swartberg is part of a UNESCO World Heritage Site.

It was built using convict labour by Thomas Bain and opened on 10 January 1888. The drystone work supporting some of its picturesque hairpin bends is particularly noteworthy.

The pass runs between Oudtshoorn in the south and Prince Albert in the north. The pass is not tarred and can be a little treacherous after rain, but offers spectacular views over the Little Karoo to the south and the Great Karoo to the north. The plant life along the pass is very interesting, many hundreds of species being found on the Swartberg.[3]

The Swartberg pass was built between 1881 and 1888 by Thomas Bain, son of the famous Andrew Geddes Bain who built Bain's Kloof Pass and many more. The dry-stone retaining walls are still in place and almost 120 years old.

The top of the pass is at 33°21′8″S 22°2′45″E / 33.35222°S 22.04583°E / -33.35222; 22.04583Coordinates: 33°21′8″S 22°2′45″E / 33.35222°S 22.04583°E / -33.35222; 22.04583.

The pass is especially famous due to the spectacular geology that is exposed at its Northern end. The contortions in the rock display astonishing anticlines and synclines, and the vivid coloration of the surrounding Quartzite is remarkable. At the Northern end of the pass seven hundred metre high quartzite cliffs of the upper Table Mountain Group can be seen, and these are often tilted through 90 degrees (sometimes even more).[4] Arguably the most famous of all these cliff faces is the spectacular 'Wall of Fire'.

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