13.6 C
Cape Town
Tuesday, April 21, 2026

Did Elephants once roam on Dyer Island?

Published on

CapeNature has discovered what appears to be elephant teeth on Dyer Island!

Dyer Island is a 20 hectare Nature Reserve, situated 8.5 Km from Kleinbaai harbour in Gansbaai, off the coast of the Western Cape. The discovery of what appears to be elephant molar teeth, was made by CapeNature staff during a routine trip to the island.

Anton Bredell, the minister of Local Government, Environmental Affairs and Development Planning in the Western Cape, says the Western Cape has a unique heritage that dates back thousands of years.

“There is so much about our province we are still discovering. Finding elephant teeth on an island 8.5km in the sea is exciting and opens up many possibilities and mysteries which we hope will continue to unravel in years to come.”

Extensive documented and peer-reviewed evidence indicates that around 18, 000 – 20, 000 years ago following the Last Glacial Maximum, reduced sea levels exposed a broad southern coastal plain or “Palaeo-Agulhas Bank” of around 60, 000 km2.

This allowed large land-based mammals to migrate onto this coastal plain and possibly make their way to the area known today as Dyer Island. Fossil evidence discovered to date, indicates that the large mammal community was species-rich and dominated by large grazing ungulates, including equids and antelopes, and quite possibly elephants.

More recent evidence also suggests that elephants occurred on the Agulhas Plain as the remains of an elephant skeleton was found at De Mond Nature Reserve some years ago. The Shipwreck Museum in Bredasdorp also houses elephant remains from the region.

“The latest discovery is now under investigation to confirm the record and to try and determine how it ended up on Dyer Island,” says Bredell.

Liesl Smit
Liesl Smit
Liesl is the Smile 90.4FM News Manager. She has been at Smile since 2016, with nearly 20 years experience in the radio industry, including reading news, field reporting and producing. In 2008 she won the Vodacom Journalist of the Year Award, Western Cape region. liesl@smile904.fm

Latest articles

Mopping up underway after heavy rains, as City ramps up winter readiness

 The City of Cape Town says clean-up operations are continuing across the metro after a series of cold fronts brought heavy rain and localised...

City: Dunoon area flooding caused by illegal structures and dumping

 The City of Cape Town has responded to online criticism by ANC Secretary General Fikile Mbalula, after he tweeted a video of flooding in...

Gift of the Givers inundated with pleas for help following heavy downpours

 Gift of the Givers teams have been activated to respond to numerous informal settlements across the Cape Metropole and Drakenstein areas, after being inundated...
error: Content is protected !!