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The Otavi Mountain Land: Namibia’s Cradle of Polymetallic Mining

by Editor
October 3, 2025
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The Otavi Mountain Land: Namibia’s Cradle of Polymetallic Mining
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The Otavi Mountain Land in northern Namibia is one of Africa’s most storied mineral provinces.

Nestled between the towns of Tsumeb, Grootfontein and Otavi, the region’s hills have long been recognised for their unusual geology and extraordinary mineral wealth.

It was here, in the early 1900s, that industrial-scale mining began in Namibia with the establishment of the Tsumeb copper mine.

This deposit would earn global renown for both the richness of its ore and the rarity of its mineral assemblage.

Geological setting

The Otavi Mountain Land forms part of the Damara Orogen, a belt of folded and metamorphosed rocks that stretches across central and northern Namibia.

The geology is dominated by dolomites, limestones, and shales of the Otavi Group, punctuated by volcanic and intrusive rocks.

Within this terrain, hydrothermal activity deposited polymetallic sulphides rich in copper, lead, zinc, silver, germanium, vanadium, gallium, and other elements.

What makes the district remarkable is not just the grades but the diversity.

The Tsumeb deposit alone contained more than 240 different mineral species, many of them unique to the locality.

This mineralogical richness has made the area both a geologist’s dream and a miner’s prize for more than a century.

Early mining history

Mining in the Otavi Mountain Land began under German colonial administration.

In 1907, die Otavi Minen- und Eisenbahn-Gesellschaft (OMEG) developed the Tsumeb Copper Mine.

A railway line was laid from the Atlantic port of Swakopmund to the interior, reaching Tsumeb by 1906, which enabled the export of copper ore.

The Tsumeb mine quickly gained international attention for the sheer richness of its ore.

Early production grades were reported at more than 10% copper, alongside high levels of lead, zinc, silver, and rare metals, including germanium and gallium.

By the mid-20th century, Tsumeb was not only Namibia’s most important mine but also one of the world’s outstanding polymetallic deposits.

In addition to Tsumeb, smaller operations sprang up across the Otavi Mountain Land.

The Kombat mine, first worked in the 1950s, became known for copper production.

The Abenab and Berg Aukas mines were developed for vanadium, lead and zinc. Khusib Springs, Nosib and various other minor prospects produced polymetallic ores intermittently through the 20th century.

Tsumeb’s legacy

The Tsumeb mine operated for more than 90 years, producing an estimated 30 million tonnes of ore grading 4.3% copper, 10% lead, 3.5% zinc, 95 grams per tonne silver, and 50 grams per tonne germanium.

It became world famous not only for its production but also for the rare minerals it recovered, including azurite, malachite, dioptase, smithsonite, and many others. Collectors and museums prize specimens from Tsumeb, and its name remains legendary in the world of mineralogy.

Processing was supported by the Tsumeb smelter, which has operated under various owners and remains in use today, adapted to treat complex ores and concentrates from across Namibia and abroad.

Known minerals and resources

The Otavi Mountain Land is naturally polymetallic. The key metals include copper, lead, zinc, silver, germanium, vanadium, gallium and cadmium.

At Abenab and Berg Aukas, vanadium was mined alongside lead and zinc, with production continuing until the 1970s. Kombat produced copper from underground workings, and Nosib and Khusib Springs revealed copper-lead-silver ore zones with valuable accessory elements.

Recent exploration has also highlighted gallium and germanium—critical metals for modern electronics and renewable energy systems.

These elements occur as by-products in zinc and lead ores and have renewed interest in the district as demand for critical minerals surges globally.

Modern companies and projects

Today, a new generation of companies is re-examining the Otavi Mountain Land.

Golden Deeps holds the Abenab, Nosib and Khusib Springs licences, as well as the newer Central Otavi Project, which includes the Graceland prospect.

These projects target high-grade polymetallic deposits with critical metals such as germanium and gallium, in addition to copper, lead, zinc and silver.

Trigon Metals is redeveloping the Kombat mine, with underground and open-pit resources being re-evaluated for modern production.

The mine has a history of producing more than 12 million tonnes of copper ore, and new drilling has confirmed extensions to mineralisation.

Other companies, including junior explorers, are testing targets across the belt.

The combination of historical high-grade mines, underexplored ground, and the emergence of new demand for strategic metals makes the Otavi Mountain Land one of Namibia’s busiest exploration frontiers.

Reserves and resources

Exact reserve figures vary by project, but historical production and modern exploration confirm the potential for significant reserves.

Tsumeb alone produced tens of millions of tonnes at world-class grades. Kombat’s historical production exceeded 12 million tonnes at grades ranging from 2% to 4% copper.

Abenab and Berg Aukas were once the world’s largest vanadium producers, with resources measured in millions of tonnes grading more than 1 per cent vanadium pentoxide alongside lead and zinc.

Modern resource estimates are smaller in scale but growing. For example, Golden Deeps has indicated resources at Abenab and Nosib of several million tonnes combined, with polymetallic grades attractive for development.

At Graceland, surface sampling has delivered assays as high as 42 per cent copper and 7,792 grams per tonne silver, with germanium up to 351 grams per tonne. These results suggest potential for discoveries beneath the gossans.

Existing mines and operations

Although the Tsumeb mine itself closed in the 1990s, the smelter continues to operate, processing ores and concentrates from the surrounding region.

The Kombat mine has been brought back into limited production, with efforts underway to establish sustained output. Smaller operations and pilot programmes are testing vanadium, zinc and polymetallic targets.

The Otavi Mountain Land is therefore not a relic of past mining glory but a living, evolving mining district.

It bridges Namibia’s mining past with its future, combining historic production with the promise of discoveries.

Outlook

The history of the Otavi Mountain Land is inextricably linked to the history of mining in Namibia.

From the opening of Tsumeb in 1907, through decades of copper, lead, zinc and vanadium production, to today’s hunt for germanium, gallium and high-grade copper-silver ores, the district has been central to Namibia’s resource economy.

As companies like Golden Deeps and Trigon Metals build on this legacy, the Otavi Mountain Land is once again at the centre of exploration attention.

Its combination of historical production, known high-grade mineralisation, and untested potential ensures it will remain a focal point for Namibia’s mining industry in the years ahead.

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