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Jukskei River


FieldValue
nameJukskei River
imageSouth Africa-Johannesburg-Jukskei river-001.jpg
image_captionJukskei flowing past Gillooly's Farm
map{{maplinkframe=yesframe-align=centerframe-width=250plain=yes
type1lineid1=Q3811044stroke-colour1=#4271aestroke-width1=5
type2lineid2=Q123009668stroke-colour2=#4271aestroke-width2=3title2=Klein Jukskei}}
pushpin_mapSouth Africa
pushpin_map_captionLocation of the Jukskei River mouth
subdivision_type1Country
subdivision_name1South Africa
subdivision_type2Province
subdivision_name2Gauteng
discharge1_locationCrocodile River
discharge1_avg120 m3/s
source1Natural Spring
source1_locationEllis Park, Johannesburg, South Africa
source1_coordinates
mouthCrocodile River
mouth_coordinates
mouth_elevation1234 m

The Jukskei River is one of the largest rivers in Johannesburg, South Africa. It is the southernmost river in the Crocodile River basin.

Course

The Jukskei begins in Ellis Park in Johannesburg. Its original spring was on the former Doornfontein farm, which measured at 18,000 litres per hour, but has since disappeared under subsequent urban development. Now the first surface expression of the Jukskei is in Bertrams at the intersection of Queen Street and Sports Avenue where it emerges from a storm drain. From there the river flows through Bezuidenhout Valley and Bruma. It then meanders in a northerly direction through Bedfordview and Edenvale before flowing through Alexandra Township. It then turns northwest and flows through Modderfontein, Buccleuch, Leeuwkop Prison, Lone Hill, Dainfern and Steyn City before joining the Crocodile River outside Lanseria.

Tributaries

The Jukskei River is joined by numerous streams along its course with its major tributaries being the Modderfontein Spruit, Braamfontein Spruit and the Klein-Jukskei. The Jukskei River provides the largest amount of water, by discharge, into the Crocodile River basin.

Character

The Jukskei is mostly shallow and not deep enough for transportation. It is also heavily polluted by urban runoff. Lack of infrastructure maintenance has let raw waste flow into the river on a daily basis. Cholera-causing bacteria have occasionally been found in the river. The river receives a large inflow from the Northern Waste Water Treatment Plant in northern Johannesburg. The Jukskei River is one of the largest contributing factors of the eutrophication problems facing Hartbeespoort Dam further down stream. Tons of waste such as plastic, metal and rubber flow down the river annually.

The banks are prone to bursting, especially in summer when rainfalls are the heaviest for the year regionally. This spells disaster for the impoverished residents of the Alexandra Township who often build makeshift shacks along the river banks owing to overcrowding and the need for access to water for washing, drinking, and cooking.

Cultural and sporting significance

The Jukskei traditionally demarcated the boundary between the Northern Transvaal and Transvaal for sporting purposes, and teams like the Titans cricket team and Blue Bulls (formerly Northern Transvaal) continue to be headquartered in Pretoria, north of the Jukskei.

References

References

  1. "Water, water... everywhere". City of Johannesburg.
  2. "Exact location of Juksei River". OpenStreetMap.
  3. [http://www.dwaf.gov.za/iwqs/rhp/eco/FROC/WMA3CrocMarico.jpg Crocodile/Marico WMA 3]
  4. Christie, Sean. (3 January 2014). "Searching for the soul of the Jukskei". Mail and Guardian.
  5. "Cholera found in Jukskei river".
  6. "Cholera found in city river".
  7. "Statement by minister Ronnie Kasrils, Minister of water affairs and forestry". South African Government.
  8. "Cholera found in Alexandra's Jukskei River". Daily Dispatch.
  9. (2011-12-10). "Concentrations of Polybrominated Diphenyl Ethers in Sediments from Jukskei River, Gauteng, South Africa". Bulletin of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology.
  10. (2006-01-12). "Gauteng residents warned to be cautious in floods". Gauteng Provincial Government.
  11. Pather, Ra'eesa. "Still no shelter for Alex flood victims, foreign nationals search for lost documents". The M&G Online.
  12. Chris van Rensburg Publications (Pty) Ltd. (1992). "Transvaal: the Golden Province". C. van Rensburg Publications.
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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