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Whangaroa Harbour (; (:faŋaɾɔa)), previously spelled Wangaroa Harbour, is an inlet on the northern coast of Northland, New Zealand. Whangaroa Bay and the Pacific Ocean are to the north. The small settlements of Totara North and Saies are on the west side of the harbour, Waitaruke on the south side, and Whangaroa on the east. State Highway 10 runs through Waitaruke. The name comes from the lament "Whaingaroa" or "what a long wait" of a woman whose warrior husband had left for a foray to the south. The harbour was formed when rising sea levels drowned a river valley about 6,000 years ago. Steep outcrops remain from ancient volcanic rocks. There are extensive mangrove swamps at the head of the harbour, and some of the oldest fossils in the North Island, dating to the early Permian about 270 million years ago, are in the Whangaroa area. ==History== According to Māori traditions, the waka ''Māhuhu-ki-te-rangi'' explored the Whangaroa harbour during early Māori settlement of New Zealand. The area was settled by descendants of ''Te Māmaru'' and ''Mataatua'' waka crews. Whaling and other ships visited Whangaroa from 1805 to 1809, including the ''General Wellesley'' and ''Commerce'' in 1806, and ''Elizabeth'' in 1809. Sixty-six members of the crew of the ''Boyd'' were killed by local Māori in 1809 after the crew whipped the son of a chief. The visits ceased as a result, resuming when the ''Dromedary'' loaded timber in 1819. Southern Right Whales were severely depleted by the hunts and almost disappeared from the area, while dolphins and killer whales still visit the harbor more frequently. A Wesleyan mission was founded in June 1823. Hongi Hika attacked local Māori to gain control of millable kauri on 10 January 1827. A party of his warriors, without his knowledge, ransacked the mission and it was abandoned. In 1828 Hongi Hika died at Whangaroa, from a wound suffered 14 months earlier in the Hokianga.〔 Europeans settled the harbour in the 1840s, and a Catholic mission was established at Waitaruke. The harbour was a centre for timber milling and gum digging after the arrival of the immigrant ship ''Lancashire Witch'' in 1865. Shipyards were established in Totara North in 1872.〔 Kauri logs were chained together to make rafts, and towed by steamer. It took three days for the logs to reach Auckland. In the early 20th century Sea Sick Bay near the south head was a whaling station, which by the 1920s had moved to Ranfurly Bay, near the north head.〔 After the Mangamuka Gorge road was sealed in 1961 it became the main route from Whangarei to the Far North, bypassing Whangaroa.〔 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Whangaroa Harbour」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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