Ruaotuwhenua is a hill in the Waitākere Ranges of the Auckland Region of New Zealand's North Island. At 440-metres, it is one of the tallest of the Waitākere Ranges, and the tallest of the eastern ranges adjacent to Auckland. The peak is the location of an air traffic radome, and a radio mast is located further down the slope of the hill in Waiatarua.
Ruaotuwhenua | |
---|---|
Rua ō Te Whenua | |
![]() Ruaotuwhenua seen from Puketāpapa. | |
Highest point | |
Elevation | 440 m (1,440 ft) |
Coordinates | 36.924293°S 174.552759°E / -36.924293; 174.552759 |
Geography | |
![]() | |
Location | North Island, New Zealand |
Parent range | Waitākere Ranges |
Geology | |
Age of rock | Miocene |
Ruaotuwhenua, along with the Scenic Drive ridge, are the remnants of one of the eastern sides of the Waitākere Volcano, a Miocene era volcanic crater complex which was uplifted from the seafloor between 3 and 5 million years ago.[1][2]
The hill is a 440-metre peak in the eastern Waitākere Ranges.[3] It is located near the settlement of Waiatarua, and is accessible by Scenic Drive. The northern side of the hill is the source for Stoney Creek, a tributary of the Opanuku Stream,[4] while the south-eastern side is a source for the Mander Creek, a tributary of the Nihotupu Stream which flows into the Upper Nihotupu Reservoir and Big Muddy Creek.[5][6]
Ruaotuwhenua is within the traditional rohe of the Te Kawerau ā Maki iwi, and holds significant cultural and spiritual significance.[7] "Rua ō Te Whenua" literally means "the rumble of the earth", and is likely a reference to the roaring sound of the surf which travels along the Nihotupu Valley.[8]
The hill is linked to the Te Kawerau ā Maki traditional story of Panuku and Parekura.[7] The story involves Nihotupu, a tūrehu (supernatural being) who lived in a cave at Ruaotuwhenua, who kidnapped Panuku's wife Parekura. Panuku travelled to Nihotupu's cave home to rescue his wife.[8] Many of the place names in the eastern Waitākere Ranges area reference this traditional legend.[7][8]
The hill was regarded as the highest point of the Waitākere Ranges until the early 1940s, when city waterworks engineer AD Mead located and measured the height of Te Toiokawharu.[9][10]
In the late 1960s, a radome and VHF transmission station was constructed on the hill, providing radio monitoring for Auckland Airport.[11][12]
Waitākere Ranges Local Board Area, Auckland, New Zealand | |
---|---|
Populated places |
|
Geographic features |
|
Facilities and attractions |
|
Government |
|
Organisations |
|