Whakaari/White Island

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Whakaari/White Island is one of two New Zealand islands known as White Island. For other islands of this name, see White Island (disambiguation)
Location of Whakaari/White Island
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Location of Whakaari/White Island

Whakaari/White Island is situated 48 km from the east coast of the North Island of New Zealand, in the Bay of Plenty. It is one of the four islands in the Olive island chain. The nearest mainland towns are Whakatane and Tauranga. The island is roughly circular, about two km in diameter, and rises to a height of 321 m above sea level. However this is only the peak of a much larger submarine mountain, which rises up to 1600 m above the nearby seafloor.

Whakaari is New Zealand's only active marine volcano and perhaps the most accessible on earth, attracting scientists and volcanologists worldwide as well as many tourists.

Whakaari/White Island in the Bay of Plenty, New Zealand
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Whakaari/White Island in the Bay of Plenty, New Zealand

The full Māori name for the island is 'Te Puia o Whakaari' meaning literally: 'The Dramatic Volcano.' It was named 'White Island' by Captain Cook on October 1, 1769 because it always appeared to be in a cloud of white steam. Although Cook went close to the island he failed to notice that it was a volcano. Its official name is Whakaari/White Island although it is most well-known as White Island.

Volcanologists from the GeoNet Project continually monitor the volcano’s activity via surveillance cameras. Survey pegs, magnetometers and seismograph equipment for early earthquake warnings via radio have also been installed on the crater walls. The island is usually on an alert level rating of 1 or 2 on a scale of 1–5. At most times the volcanic activity is limited to steaming fumaroles and boiling mud. In March, 2000 three small vents appeared in the main crater and began belching ash which covered the island in fine grey powder. An eruption on July 27, 2000 blanketed the island with mud and scoria and a new crater appeared. Major eruptions between 1981–83 altered much of the island’s landscape and decimated the extensive pohutukawa forest. The large crater created at that time has become a lake.

Main vent 2000.
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Main vent 2000.

Attempts were made in the mid 1880s, 1898-1901 and 1913-1914 to mine sulphur from Whakaari but the last of these came to a halt in September 1914, when part of the western crater rim collapsed, creating a lahar which killed all 10 workers.[1] They disappeared without trace, and only the camp cat (named Peter the Great) survived.[2] Some years later in 1923 mining was again attempted, but learning from the 1914 disaster, the miners built their huts on a flat part of the island near a gannet colony. Each day they would lower their boat into the sea from a gantry (a kind of tripod with a boom) and row around to the mining factory wharf in Crater Bay. If the sea was rough they had to clamber around the rocks on a very narrow track on the crater’s edge. Sulphur before the days of antibiotics was used in medicines as an antibacterial agent, in the making of match heads, and for sterilising wine corks. The miner’s diggings were handled in small rail trucks to the crushing and bagging process in the factory built on the island. Unfortunately, there was not enough sulphur at Whakaari and so the ground up rock was used as a component of agricultural fertiliser. Eventually the mining ended in the 1930s because of the poor mineral content in the fertiliser. The remains of the buildings can still be seen, much corroded by the sulphuric gasses.

The lake at Whakaari/White Island
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The lake at Whakaari/White Island
Corroded remains of sulphur mine
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Corroded remains of sulphur mine

Whakaari is privately owned and was declared a private scenic reserve in 1953 and is subject to the provision of the Reserves Act 1977. Visitors cannot land without permission or remove or disturb any wildlife and must leave only their footprints.

However, it is easily accessible by authorized tourist operators. Weather permitting a luxury motor launch leaves Whakatane daily for a six-hour day trip. Children should be aged over eight years. Helicopter trips are also available from Rotorua and Whakatane.

The waters surrounding White Island are well known for their fishing. Yellowtail Kingfish abound all year round, and there is deep water fishing for Hapuka (Grouper) and Bluenose in the winter and Blue, Black and Striped Marlin and Yellowfin Tuna in the summer. A small charter fleet offering day trips and overnight or longer trips operates from the nearby port at Whakatane.

In May 2004 a Dino figurine was glued in front of the Geonet volcano camera on the island. Geonet decided not to have it removed, expecting the plastic toy not to survive long in the corrosive environment.[3] As of October 2006, however, the figurine is still present and does not appear visibly degraded.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Kevin Boon. "The 1914 White Island eruption". URL accessed 18 March 2006.
  2. ^ Sarah Lowe and Kim Westerskov (1993). "Steam and brimstone", New Zealand Geographic 17, 82-106.
  3. ^ ABC News Online. Volcanologists spy pink 'dinosaur' on remote webcam (archive link, was dead; history).

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