Auckland volcanic field

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Template:Short description Template:Use New Zealand English Template:Use dmy dates

Template:Infobox mountain

The Auckland volcanic field is an area of monogenetic volcanoes covered by much of the metropolitan area of Auckland, New Zealand's largest city, located in the North Island. The approximately 53 volcanoes<ref name=Hayward_more_2011 /> in the field have produced a diverse array of maars (explosion craters), tuff rings, scoria cones, and lava flows. With the exception of Rangitoto, no volcano has erupted more than once,<ref name="Shane2013">Template:Cite journal</ref><ref name="Linnell2016">Template:Cite journal</ref> but the other eruptions lasted for various periods ranging from a few weeks to several years.<ref name=Hayward_essential_2011>Template:Cite book</ref> Rangitoto erupted several times<ref name="Linnell2016" /> and recently twice; in an eruption that occurred about 600 years ago, followed by a second eruption approximately 50 years later.<ref name="Needham 2011">Template:Cite journal</ref> The field is fuelled entirely by basaltic magma, unlike the explosive subduction-driven volcanism in the central North Island, such as at Mount Ruapehu and Lake Taupō.<ref name="Smith and Allen">Template:Cite web</ref>

Features

The field ranges from Lake Pupuke and Rangitoto Island in the north to Matukutururu (Wiri Mountain) in the south, and from Mount Albert in the west to Pigeon Mountain in the east.

The first vent erupted at Pupuke 193,200 ± 2,800 years ago.<ref name="Leonard2017">Template:Cite journal</ref> The most recent eruption (about 600 years ago<ref name="UN" /> and within historical memory of the local Māori) was of Rangitoto, an island shield volcano just east of the city, erupting 0.7 cubic kilometres of lava. The last volcano to erupt was much bigger than all others, with Rangitoto making up 41 per cent of the field's entire volume of erupted material<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> with characteristics as to slope and symmetry around the eruptive vents seen in basaltic shield volcanoes as might be expected in a volcano, that may have buried other volcanoes, and now known to have a 1000-year odd eruptive history.<ref name="Linnell2016" /><ref name="Shane2013" /> The field's other volcanoes are relatively small, with most less than Template:Convert in height.

Lake Pupuke, on the North Shore near Takapuna, is a volcanic explosion crater. A few similar craters such as Ōrākei Basin are open to the sea.

The field has produced voluminous lava flows that cover much of the Auckland isthmus. One of the longest runs from Mt Saint John northward, almost crossing the Waitematā Harbour to form Meola Reef.<ref>Hayward, Murdoch, Maitland (2011). pp. 134–135.</ref> More than 50 lava tubes and other lava caves have been discovered, including the Template:Convert-long Wiri Lava Cave.<ref>Template:Cite periodical</ref> There can be an association with lava caves and the formation of rootless cones due to their mechanism of formation and a rootless cone was suggested to exist at Wiri being Matukutūreia.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> This may not be quite the case even though at least one steam only driven eruption occurred close to Matukutūreia.<ref name=Cronin2019>Template:Cite report</ref> The second-longest individual cave in the Auckland field, some Template:Convert in total length, is the Cave of a Thousand Press-ups to the east of Maungakiekie/One Tree Hill.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> Two impressive depressions caused by lava cave collapses are the Puka Street Grotto and the nearby Hochstetter Pond, also known as Grotto Street Pond, in Onehunga.<ref>Hayward, Murdoch, Maitland (2011). pp. 17–18.</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

For most of the 200,000 years that the field has been erupting, the planet has been in glacial periods (ice ages) where sea levels were much lower due to water being locked up as ice, and the Waitemata and Manukau Harbours were dry land. All the volcanoes probably erupted on land except for Rangitoto, which erupted during the current interglacial (warmer) period.<ref>Hayward, Murdoch, Maitland (2011). pp. 2–3.</ref>

Tectonic relationships

<mapframe frameless="1" align="right" text="Map of faults and Quaternary volcanoes in the Auckland region. To show well the volcanoes in relation to fault lines you have to click on the map to enlarge and then zoom and pan. This also enables mouse over of the volcano and fault names. Definite active faults are shown in red. Well characterised inactive fault segments are in dark grey and other faults are shown in grey. A number of faults characterised by sea floor studies off the west coast of North Island are not shown. The type of volcanic eruption (some are composite) is indicated by basalt shield type eruption (black), scoria cone (red), or phreatomagmatic eruptions tuff ring (red-brown) and maar (purple). Volcanoes from both the Auckland volcanic field and South Auckland volcanic field are displayed. Miocene volcanoes are not shown." width="250" height="250" latitude="-36.96" longitude="174.86" icon="no" zoom="8">{{Wikipedia:Map data/Auckland faults and volcanoes}}</mapframe> The Auckland region lies within the Australian Plate, about Template:Convert west of its plate boundary with the Pacific Plate.<ref name="Kenny2012">Template:Cite journal</ref> The volcanoes are located south of a geological region called the Northland Allochthon, and with the northern volcanoes located over early Miocene sedimentary deposits of the Waitematā Group of rocks and the southern volcanoes over post Miocene sediments.<ref name="Kenny2012" /> A large proportion of the volcanoes in the field, particularly those with cone structures, lie within Template:Convert of inferred or known faults, with the qualification that these are inactive historic faults and unlike in many other volcanic fields it is rare for volcanoes to be actually on the fault line.<ref name="Stewart2015">Template:Cite conference</ref> The structure of these Auckland regional faults and the resulting fault blocks is complex but like the volcanic field their locations can be postulated to be related to gravitational variations and where the Stokes Magnetic Anomaly passes through this section of the North Island.<ref name="Kenny2012" /> The field is part of the Auckland Volcanic Province which comprises four volcanic fields with intra-plate basaltic volcanism starting in the south, at Okete, near Raglan in late Pliocene times (2.7-1.8 Ma).<ref name="Nemeth2012" /> Activity has since moved north through the Ngatutura, South Auckland and Auckland fields since then.<ref name=Bischoff2021>Template:Cite journal</ref>

Human context

File:TerracingonOneTreeHill.JPG
Terraces carved by Māori into the slopes of Maungakiekie / One Tree Hill

Mythology

Tāmaki Māori myths describe the creation of the volcanic field as a creation of Mataaho (the guardian of the earth's secrets) and his brother Rūaumoko (the god of earthquakes and volcanoes), made as punishment against a tribe of patupaiarehe, supernatural beings living in the Waitākere Ranges, who used deadly magic from the earth to defeat a war party of patupaiarehe from the Hunua Ranges.<ref name="Maoriorgnz">Template:Cite web</ref><ref name="MangereMountain">Template:Cite web</ref> In some traditions, the fire goddess Mahuika creates the volcanic field as a way to warm Mataaho, after his wife leaves and takes his clothing.<ref name="MakaurauMarae">Template:Cite web</ref><ref name="teara-story">Template:Cite web</ref> Because of their close association to Mataaho, the volcanic features can be collectively referred to as Nga Maunga a Mataaho ("The Mountains of Mataaho"),<ref name="Maoriorgnz" /> or Ngā Huinga-a-Mataaho ("the gathered volcanoes of Mataaho").<ref name="teara-story" /> Many of the volcanic features of Māngere can be referred to as Nga Tapuwae a Mataoho ("The Sacred Footprints of Mataoho"), including Māngere Lagoon, Waitomokia, Crater Hill, Kohuora, Pukaki Lagoon and Robertson Hill.<ref name="MakaurauMarae" /><ref name="Graham">Template:Cite Q</ref> Many of the Māori language names of volcanic features in the field refer to Mataaho by name, including Te Pane o Mataaho (Māngere Mountain), Te Tapuwae a Mataoho (Robertson Hill) and Te Kapua Kai o Mataoho (the crater of Maungawhau / Mount Eden).

Usage

Many of the maunga (mountains) were occupied by substantial Māori (fortifications) before Pākehā settlement, and many terraces and other archeological remnants are still visible.<ref name="TupunaPlan">Template:Cite web</ref> Many of the cones have been levelled or strongly altered, in small part due to the historical Māori use, but mostly through relatively recent quarrying of construction materials (especially scoria). However many of the remaining volcanoes are now preserved as landmarks and parks.<ref name="UN" />

The warmer northern sides of the mountains were also popular among early Pākehā settlers for housing.<ref name="TupunaPlan" /> In the 1880s, Takarunga / Mount Victoria and Maungauika / North Head were developed as military installations due to fears of a Russian invasion.<ref name="TupunaPlan" /> The cones are also protected by a 1915 law, the Reserves and Other Lands Disposal and Public Bodies Empowering Act 1915, which was passed due to early concern that the distinctive landscape was being eroded, especially by quarrying. While often ignored until the late 20th century, it has amongst other things minimised severe changes to Mount Roskill proposed by Transit New Zealand for the Southwestern Motorway.<ref name="LAW">"The volcanic hills are being destroyed..." – City of Fire, insert magazine in The New Zealand Herald, 15 February 2008</ref>

In March 2007, New Zealand submitted the volcanic field, with several specifically named features, as a World Heritage Site candidate based on its unique combination of natural and cultural features.<ref name="UN">Template:Cite web</ref> At that time, only 2 per cent of more than 800 World Heritage Sites worldwide were in this "mixed" category.

For most of Auckland's post-1840 history, the mountains have been administered variously by the New Zealand Crown, the Auckland Council (or its former bodies including the Auckland City Council and Manukau City Council) or the Department of Conservation.<ref name="TupunaPlan" />

In the 2014 Treaty of Waitangi settlement between the Crown and the Ngā Mana Whenua o Tāmaki Makaurau collective of 13 Auckland iwi and hapū (also known as the Tāmaki Collective), ownership of the 14 Tūpuna Maunga (ancestral mountains) of Tāmaki Makaurau / Auckland, was vested to the collective. The legislation specified that the land be held in trust "for the common benefit of Ngā Mana Whenua o Tāmaki Makaurau and the other people of Auckland". The Tūpuna Maunga o Tāmaki Makaurau Authority or Tūpuna Maunga Authority (TMA) is the co-governance organisation established to administer the 14 Tūpuna Maunga. Auckland Council manages the Tūpuna Maunga under the direction of the TMA.<ref name="TupunaPlan" /><ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Dangers

Since the field is not extinct, new volcanic events may occur at any time, though the usual period between events is, on average, somewhere between hundreds to thousands of years. There has been at least one eruption in every 2,500 years over the last 50,000 years.<ref name="Nemeth2012">Template:Cite conference</ref> However, the effects of such an event—especially a full-scale eruption—would be substantial, ranging from pyroclastic surges to earthquakes,<ref name="FIRE" /> lava bombs, ash falls, and the venting volcanic gas, as well as lava flows. These effects might continue for several months, potentially causing substantial destruction and disruption, ranging from the burial of substantial tracts of residential or commercial property, to the mid-to-long-term closures of major parts of the country's infrastructure such as the Port of Auckland, the State Highway network, or the Auckland Airport.<ref name="CONT">Template:Cite web</ref> It is possible that several volcanoes could erupt simultaneously. There is strong evidence that eight erupted within a span of 3000 years or so, between 31,000 and 28,000 years ago.

Most eruptive events in the field have been small volume, very constrained in time, typically involving less than Template:Convert of magma making its way to the surface.<ref name="Nemeth2012" /> However the same amount of magma can have an order of magnitude different impact. An underwater eruption which is more likely to be explosive resulted in the formation of the Template:Convert wide Ōrākei crater that destroyed an area of Template:Convert by crater formation and base surge impact. This contrasts with the about Template:Convert diameter cone produced by the same amount of upwelling magma that might be expected to destroy an area of Template:Convert if there is no ground water interaction.<ref name="Nemeth2012" /> Modelling has suggested that the next eruption in the volcanic field is likely to be associated with water and in the area extending from the central city to its north and northeast suburbs surrounding and including the Waitemata Harbour.<ref name="Magill2004">Template:Cite journal</ref> Within New Zealand the volcanic hazard of the field is graded below that of Taupō Volcanic Zone volcano's but is likely to be perceived by the population affected as a greater potential nuisance if it occurs.<ref name="Doherty2009">Template:Cite web</ref>

Various operative structures, plans and systems have been set up to prepare responses to volcanic activity within the urban areas, mainly coordinated in the Auckland Volcanic Field Contingency Plan<ref name=CONT /> of the Auckland Regional Council, which provides a framework for interaction of civil defence and emergency services during an eruption. Auckland also has a seismic monitoring network comprising six seismometers—including one Template:Convert deep at Riverhead—and three repeaters within the region that will detect the small tremors likely to precede any volcanic activity.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> This is likely to give between a few hours and several days' warning of an impending eruption, and its approximate location.<ref name="FIRE">"When the earth starts to shake". City of Fire, insert magazine in The New Zealand Herald, 15 February 2008.</ref>

Auckland War Memorial Museum, itself built on the crater rim of Pukekawa, has an exhibition on the field, including the "Puia Street multi-sensory visitor experience", which simulates a grandstand view of an eruption in Auckland.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

List of volcanoes

The volcanoes within the field are:<ref name=Hayward_essential_2011 /><ref>Template:Cite journal</ref><ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

Volcanoes Age (thousand years)<ref name="Hopkins 2020">Template:Cite journal</ref> Height Location (Coordinates) Refs Images
Albert Park Volcano 145.0 ± 4.0 Unclear Template:Coord <ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>
File:Albert Park From Lumley Centre Building.jpg
Albert Park Volcano surrounded by city buildings
Ash Hill 31.8 ± 0.4 Template:Convert Template:Coord
Boggust Park Crater 130+ Template:Convert Template:Coord <ref name=Hayward_more_2011>Template:Cite journal</ref>
File:Boggust Park Volcano, 2018.jpg
Oblique aerial view of Boggust Park explosion crater from the north, 2018.
Cemetery Crater Undated Template:Convert Template:Coord <ref name=Hayward_more_2011 />
File:Cemetery Crater 2018.jpg
Site of Cemetery Crater beneath houses in 2018.
Crater Hill 30.4 ± 0.8 Template:Coord
File:Crater Hill 2009.jpg
Crater Hill volcano in 2009
File:Crater hill volcano Auckland.jpg
Crater Hill volcano
Grafton Volcano 106.5 Template:Convert Template:Coord
File:Grafton Volcano 2018 (3).jpg
Site of Grafton explosion crater and tuff ring in 2018, completely covered in houses and medical School except for Outhwaite Park
Hampton Park 57.0 ± 32.0 Template:Convert Template:Coord
File:Hampton Park 2009.jpg
Hampton Park Volcano from north, 2009
Kohuora 33.7 ± 2.4 Template:Convert Template:Coord
File:Kohuora Explosion Crater 2009.jpg
Kohuora Explosion Crater from northwest, 2009
Māngere Lagoon 59.5 Template:Convert Template:Coord
File:MangereLagoon.2.jpg
Māngere Lagoon
Matanginui / Green Mount 19.6 ± 6.6 Template:Convert Template:Coord
File:Green Mt 2009.jpg
Rubbish heap replaces quarried away Matanginui / Green Mountain, 2009
Matukutūreia / McLaughlins Mountain 48.0 ± 3.0 Template:Convert Template:Coord <ref name=Cronin2019/>
File:McLaughlin Mt 2018.jpg
Matukutureia / McLaughlins Mt, 2018
Maungakiekie / One Tree Hill 67.0 ± 12.0 Template:Convert Template:Coord
File:One Tree Hill 2018.jpg
Maungakiekie / One Tree Hill from the northwest, 2018
File:One Tree Hill, Auckland.jpg
Maungakiekie / One Tree Hill and its obelisk
Maungarahiri / Little Rangitoto 24.6 ± 0.6 Template:Convert Template:Coord
File:Little Rangitoto 2019.jpg
Maungarahiri / Little Rangitoto from the north over Benson Rd shops, 2019
Maungarei / Mount Wellington 10.0 ± 1.0 Template:Convert Template:Coord
File:Mt Wellington 2018.jpg
Maungarei / Mount Wellington, 2018
Te Tauoma / Purchas Hill
Maungarei / Mount Wellington from the quarried remnants of Te Tauoma
Maungataketake / Elletts Mountain 88.9 ± 4.8 Template:Convert Template:Coord
File:Maungataketake 2018.jpg
Quarried out site of Maungataketake Volcano, 2018
Maungauika / North Head 87.5 ± 15.2 Template:Convert Template:Coord
File:North Head 2018.jpg
Maungauika / North Head Volcano, 2018
File:North Head North Shore City.jpg
Maungauika / North Head (center) and Takarunga / Mount Victoria (left) scoria cones
Maungawhau / Mount Eden 28.0 ± 0.6 Template:Convert Template:Coord
File:Mt Eden 2018.jpg
Maungawhau / Mount Eden, 2018
File:Mount Eden Crater Hollow Auckland.jpg
Crater of Maungawhau / Mount Eden
Motukorea / Browns Island 24.4 ± 0.6 Template:Convert Template:Coord
File:Motukorea 2009.jpg
Motukorea / Browns Island, 2009
File:Browns Island01.jpg
Motukorea / Browns Island
Mount Robertson / Sturges Park 24.3 ± 0.8 Template:Convert Template:Coord
File:Sturges Park 2018.jpg
Mount Robertson / Sturges Park from the north, 2018
Ōhinerau / Mount Hobson 34.2 ± 1.8 Template:Convert Template:Coord
File:Epsom Girls' Grammar School and Ōhinerau Mount Hobson.jpg
Ōhinerau / Mount Hobson
Ohuiarangi / Pigeon Mountain 23.4 ± 0.8 Template:Convert Template:Coord
File:Pigeon Mt.jpg
Ohuiarangi / Pigeon Mt, 2009
Ōrākei Basin 126.0 ± 6.0 Template:Convert Template:Coord
File:Orakei Basin 2018.jpg
Ōrākei Basin, 2018
Ōtāhuhu / Mount Richmond 30.2 ± 4.2 Template:Convert Template:Coord
File:Mt Richmond 2018.jpg
Ōtāhuhu / Mt Richmond, 2018
Ōtuataua 24.2 ± 1.8 Template:Convert Template:Coord
File:Otuataua 2009.jpg
Ōtuataua volcanic cone and lava flow field
Ōwairaka / Te Ahi-kā-a-Rakataura / Mount Albert 119.2 ± 5.6 Template:Convert Template:Coord
File:Mt Albert 2009.jpg
Ōwairaka / Mt Albert, 2009
Puhinui Craters Undated Template:Convert Template:Coord <ref name=Hayward_more_2011 />
File:Puhinui Craters 2018.jpg
Puhinui Craters, 2018
Pukaki Lagoon 45+ Template:Convert Template:Coord
File:Pukaki Lagoon 2018.jpg
Pukaki explosion crater and tuff ring, 2018
File:PukakiLagoon.1.jpg
Pukaki maar
Pukeiti 23.7 Template:Convert Template:Coord
File:Pukeiti 2009.jpg
Pukeiti volcano, 2009
Pukekawa / Auckland Domain 106.0 ± 8.0 Template:Convert Template:Coord
File:Domain Volcano 2018.jpg
Pukekawa / Auckland Domain, 2018
File:Auckland Domain, Nueva Zelanda - panoramio (2).jpg
Sports grounds within Pukekawa volcano
Pukewīwī / Puketāpapa / Mount Roskill 105.3 ± 6.2 Template:Convert Template:Coord
File:Mt Roskill 2018.jpg
Pukewīwī / Puketāpapa / Mt Roskill, 2018
Pukewairiki 130+ Template:Convert Template:Coord
File:Pukewairiki 2009.jpg
Pukewairiki explosion crater and tuff ring, 2009
Pupuke 193.2 ± 5.6 Template:Convert Template:Coord
File:Lake Pupuke - satellite photo.jpg
Pupuke crater from space in 2006
Rangitoto Island 0.62 (first eruption) Template:Convert Template:Coord
File:Rangitoto from Achilles Point.jpg
Rangitoto Island on the horizon
Rarotonga / Mount Smart 20.1 ± 0.2 Template:Convert (quarried) Template:Coord
File:Mt Smart 2009.jpg
The quarried out cone of Rarotonga / Mt Smart is now Mt Smart Stadium, 2018
Styaks Swamp 19.1 Template:Convert Template:Coord
File:Styaks Swamp 2009.jpg
Site of Styaks Swamp buried beneath buildings and road, 2009
Takaroro / Mount Cambria 42.3 ± 22.0 Template:Convert (quarried) Template:Coord
File:Mt Cambria 2018.jpg
Site of quarried away Takaroro / Mt Cambria, 2018
Takarunga / Mount Victoria 34.8 ± 4.0 Template:Convert Template:Coord
File:Mt Victoria 2018.jpg
Takarunga / Mount Victoria, 2018
Taurere / Taylors Hill 30.2 ± 0.2 Template:Convert Template:Coord
File:Taylors Hill 1994.jpg
Taurere / Taylors Hill, 1994
Te Apunga-o-Tainui / McLennan Hills 41.3 ± 2.4 Template:Convert (quarried) Template:Coord
File:Military encampment at Mount Richmond (1861).jpg
Te Apunga-o-Tainui / McLennan Hills, Painting by G.H. Cooper, 1861, Auckland Art Gallery
Te Hopua-a-Rangi / Gloucester Park 31.0 Template:Convert Template:Coord
File:Te Hopua 2018.jpg
Te Hopua, 2018
Te Kopua Kai-a-Hiku / Panmure Basin 25.2 ± 1.8 Template:Convert Template:Coord <ref name="Hayward2019">Template:Cite book</ref>
File:Panmure Basin 2009.jpg
Panmure Basin, 2009
File:Lagoon Drive Walking Pathway.jpg
Te Kopua Kai-a-Hiku / Panmure Basin with Maungarei / Mount Wellington behind
Te Kopua-o-Matakamokamo / Tank Farm / Tuff Crater 181.0 ± 2.0 Template:Convert Template:Coord
File:Tank Farm 2009.jpg
Te Kopua-o-Matokamokamo / Tank Farm, 2009
Onepoto 187.6 Template:Convert Template:Coord
File:Onepoto 2009.jpg
Onepoto explosion crater and tuff ring, 2009
Te Kōpuke / Tītīkōpuke / Mount St John 75.3 ± 3.4 Template:Convert Template:Coord
File:Mt St John 2009.jpg
Te Kōpuke / Tītīkōpuke / Mount St John, 2009
File:MtStJohnCrater.1.jpg
Crater of Te Kōpuke / Tītīkōpuke / Mount St John
Te Motu-a-Hiaroa / Puketutu 29.8 ± 4.4 Template:Convert Template:Coord
File:Puketutu 2018.jpg
Te Motu-a-Hiaroa / Puketutu Island Volcano, 2018
Te Pane-o-Mataaho / Māngere Mountain 59.0 ± 20.0 Template:Convert Template:Coord <ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
File:Mangere Mt 2009.jpg
Te Pane-o-Mataaho / Māngere Mountain, 2009
File:Mt Mangere,Auckland.NZ (11334561603).jpg
Te Pane-o-Mataaho / Māngere Mountain from the east
Te Pou Hawaiki 28.0+ Template:Convert (quarried) Template:Coord
File:Te Pou Hawaiki 2018x.jpg
Site of Te Pou Hawaiki is now a three-storey concrete carpark building, 2018
Te Puke ō Tara / Otara Hill 56.5 Template:Convert (quarried) Template:Coord
File:Otara Hill 2009.jpg
The buildings in the middle of the photo are on the site of quarried away Te Puke ō Tara / Otara Hill volcano, 2009
Te Tātua-a-Riukiuta / Three Kings 31.0 ± 1.8 Template:Convert Template:Coord
File:Three Kings 2018.jpg
The entire crater and tuff ring of Te Tātua-a-Riukiuta / Three Kings
File:Three Kings Quarry Scenery Views I.jpg
Quarrying has removed two of the Tātua-a-Riukiuta / Three Kings
Te Tauoma / Purchas Hill 10.9 ± 0.2 Template:Convert (quarried) Template:Coord
File:Purchas Hill 2018.jpg
The site of Te Tauoma / Purchas Hill, 2018
Waitomokia / Mt Gabriel 20.3 ± 0.2 Template:Convert (quarried) Template:Coord
File:Waitomokia 2018.jpg
Waitomokia explosion crater and tuff ring, 2018
Whakamuhu / Saint Heliers / Glover Park – see Achilles Point 161.0 ± 36.0 Template:Convert Template:Coord
File:St Heliers 2009.jpg
Whakamuhu / St Heliers Volcano, 2009
File:Eastern Beaches Of Auckland City.jpg
The Glover Park sports ground at lower right of this photo is situated within the Whakamuhu tuff ring. Over the water in the distance on the right is the scoria cone of Maungauika / North Head and in the left middle is the tuff crater filled in by the sea of Ōrākei Basin. Beyond Ōrākei Basin in the middle distance are several vegetation covered scoria cones.
Wiri Mountain / Matukutūruru 30.1–31.0 Template:Convert (quarried) Template:Coord
File:Wiri Mt 2018.jpg
Site of quarried away Matukutururu / Wiri Mt, 2018

See also

References

Template:Reflist

Further reading

Template:Commons category

Template:Auckland Template:Auckland volcanic field