Overview
Table Mountain radiates an immense, grounding energy that visitors from diverse traditions consistently recognize as profoundly sacred. The mountain's extraordinary geological age, over half a billion years, creates an energy field that many describe as carrying the wisdom and stability of deep time itself. The Khoisan people's reverence for the mountain reflects their recognition of it as a place where the earth's consciousness is especially accessible. The famous tablecloth cloud that cascades over the summit is experienced by many as a visible manifestation of the mountain's living energy. Standing on the summit plateau, visitors report a powerful sense of connection to the African continent and to the most ancient layers of human spiritual experience.
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History, Archaeology & Significance
Table Mountain is a flat-topped sandstone massif rising 1,085 meters above Cape Town, South Africa, and is one of the most iconic natural landmarks on the African continent. The mountain is approximately 600 million years old, making it one of the oldest mountains on Earth, and its unique table-top profile and diverse fynbos vegetation have earned it recognition as one of the New7Wonders of Nature. The Khoisan people, the indigenous inhabitants of the Cape, regarded the mountain as sacred and called it Hoerikwaggo (Mountain in the Sea). Table Mountain has been a navigational landmark since the earliest Portuguese voyages around the Cape, and the arrival of Dutch colonists in 1652 transformed the Cape Peninsula into a contested landscape. The mountain is now a national park and UNESCO World Heritage Site, harboring over 2,200 plant species.
Rory's Field Notes
Iconic flat-top mountain with Type 5 node at Maclear's Beacon.
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