Readings on Wetlands & Hauraki
- 27 September 2024
I have found these articles online and read - thought I would store them here.
- The Endeavour Journal of Sir Joseph Banks
- The common raupō once kept NZ’s wetlands and lakes thriving – now it could help restore them
- Deforestation ‘roaring back’ despite 140-country vow to end destruction
- The tribes of the Marutūahu confederation are Ngāti Rongoū, Ngāti Tamaterā, Ngāti Whanaunga, Ngāti Maru and Ngāti Pāoa. They are all located in the Hauraki region, and trace their descent from a common ancestor, Marutūahu.
- Deforestation, drainage and development on the Hauraki Plains
- Cook Landmarks at 'The Thames' (New Zealand), November 1769
- Te hopu tuna – eeling.
- Protect at-risk rural land, don't wait for the 'slowest traveller'
- What is ‘nature’? Dictionaries urged to include humans in definition. Defining nature as separate from people perpetuates troubled relationship with the natural world, say campaigners.
- Hauraki Plains - River and Road Communications
- Coastal Plains Inundated by Tidal Flood. by Graham Watton from the Hauraki Plains Gazette, Friday, May 6, 1938
- To See Obliquely: Kate van der Drift’s Listening to a Wet Land
- Brett Graham at 60th Venice Biennale
- Ngāti Pāoa's goal to restore badly polluted rivers
-
Remaking Muddy Blue Spaces: Histories of Human-Wetlands Interactions in the Waipā River and the Creation of Environmental Injustices