There are no fewer than seven gold mines surrounding the town. As if to make up too all noise of this industry the Abe Bailey Nature Reserve lies just outside, Carletonville. This is a sanctuary of grassland and wetland where bird spotting is done and well rewarded with the prospect of seeing at least 60 species on any given morning. The Greater and Lesser Flamingo use the wetland as do; 'Various cranes; Swamp hens; Herons; the African fish eagle and Korhaans'. ("There are also some lovey shaded picnic spots, for day visitors!)
The 'Losberg' hiking trail wends its way through the Tolokwe Ruins which was: 'an Iron Age settlement'. There is a skydiving club based in the town for kicks, or you can visit Lepalong on Kleinfontein farm just outside town where you can explore a system of caves occupied by the 'Kwena people'' in the early 1800s. 'Lepalong' is a Tswana name, recounted in oral records collected by Paul-Lambert Breutz, for a large natural cavern system in the vicinity of modern Carletonville and Potchefstroom. Lepalong, was an extreme choice for a home, made, so the oral records say, by displaced 'Kwena people' who had fled southwards, away from Mzilikazi.
This cavern, was occupied between 1827 and 1836, and the record of that occupation is preserved in the substantial remains of what must have been a complete underground village. The value of this archaeological site is that it provides a record of social history and evidence for one kind of extreme strategic response to the strife of that period which. In the shifting matrix of what might be called the: "Difaqane Historiography, provides a concrete expression of what life was like" (Link for the purchase of this book in: FURTHER READING, also availible in further reading is more information on the following...
Julian Cobbing's critique of settler ‘alibi’ historiography and liberal interpretations of the difaqane locates causality for this strife and turmoil away from purely internal African agency and exposes the potential role of imperial Europe and its slaving agents. Central to his critique is a demythologising of the role of the Zulu kingdom as the prime catalyst and epicentre from which all disruption and turmoil ultimately emanated.)
It may be that Cobbing's analysis has swung the historiographic pendulum rather violently, and detailed regional investigations may find his general hypotheses out of step with the evidence. "It is the aim of this essay to introduce archaeological material into the debate about the difaqane as an additional source from which a more detailed history for the period may be constructed. Cobbing's analyses extend the range of possibilities for assessing the archaeological evidence as it currently exists and as more comes to hand. It seems that the present archaeological data contribute to a history of the period of upheaval labelled the difaqane in several ways. Firstly, and in the case of the western Trans-Vaal, it helps untangle multiple causes by pointing out potential relationships between changes within Sotho/Tswana settlements during the late eighteenth century and an expanding northern Cape frontier as well as other tensions."
https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0373543/
https://www.cogta.gov.za/index.php/2021/06/01/understanding-local-government/
https://merafong.gov.za/
https://www.sahumanities.org/index.php/sah/article/view/443
https://www.artefacts.co.za/main/Buildings/bldgframes.php?bldgid=11129
https://www.jstor.org/stable/10.18772/21995012521
https://www.africanhistoryextra.com/p/the-stone-ruins-of-south-africa-a
https://www.sa-venues.com/golf/goldfields-west-golf-club.php
https://www.sa-venues.com/things-to-do/gauteng/bysuburb/carletonville/
https://www.cambridge.org/core/books/abs/mfecane-aftermath/archaeological-indicators-for-stress-in-the-western-transvaal-region-between-the-seventeenth-and-nineteenth-centuries/CCBDF107E95991032C842ECA85D0BE20
https://www.lekkeslaap.co.za/accommodation-in/carletonville/about