Abstract: Both 'indigenous rights' and environmental discourses brought a NGO-led natural resource mapping project to the West Caprivi Game Park in northern Namibia in the late 1990s. San countermapping elsewhere in southern Africa demonstrates how mapping has been used as a tool for 'indigenous' identity-building and asserting authority over land. This paper explores how mapping activities reflected, and became part of, institutional and ethnic struggles over identity, authority and natural resources.