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New Zealand's most endangered town
The first building to be shifted out of harm’s way was the Batson Hotel. In 1911, it was winched upwards, by hand, on makeshift trestles and sloping planks, from its flood-prone river terrace onto—but who could have known it then?—the scarp terrace of the Alpine Fault. The hotel expanded to become the gracious Glacier Hotel, which was destroyed by fire in 1953. It was rebuilt to the north, and in 2016, written off by the flooded Waiho River. A boulder as big as a truck still sits inside the ruined building. Keep reading...
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Home safe home
Research on the Alpine Fault suggests there’s a high chance of a magnitude-8 event occurring within the next half century. This will cause significant damage in the area, but just as the 2016 Kaikōura earthquake had a significant impact on Wellington, it is also likely to be widely felt across the lower North Island. Some 30,000 residential chimneys in Christchurch toppled or caused damage during the 2010 and 2011 Canterbury earthquakes. Most were unreinforced concrete masonry or brick, which are common in pre-1970s homes. Chimneys are just one feature of a home we can make safer for future earthquakes. The Earthquake Commission has assembled a quickfire list of those features most likely to fail, and what can be done to mitigate damage and danger to occupants. Keep reading...
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Less than a week to go
Time is ticking away for entries into this year's New Zealand Geographic Photographer of the Year. The country’s richest and most popular photographic event, Photographer of the Year encompasses a competition, exhibition, audience voting and awards night.
Win a share of $5000 cash, a voyage with Heritage Expeditions, a cycle trail with Adventure South, public notoriety, industry back-slaps and the envious stares of your peers, all on one stage.
This is the biggest event of the photography calendar in New Zealand—make sure you're part of it.
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You'll be competing for the grand prix Nikon Photographer of the Year, Young Photographer, Ockham Residential People's Choice, and Resene Colour awards. Categories include Resene Landscape, Progear PhotoStory, Electric Kiwi Wildlife, Lumix Society, Lightforce Aerial and a new category, Resene Built Environment. Photographers keep copyright—this isn’t a rights grab. Entries close next week; midday Wednesday 14 July. Click here to start preparing your entry.
Image; Ben Crowle, Electric Kiwi Wildlife 2020
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Not an alpine parrot after all
Kea are the mischief-makers of the mountains, but a genome study shows they are not tied to alpine areas. As rising temperatures shrink their habitat, they could return to lowlands—if they can find suitable places to live. Fossils suggest that kea once occupied low-lying areas throughout the South Island and even in the North Island. In fact, there’s nothing “to stop kea from living at lower altitudes”, says University of Otago evolutionary geneticist Michael Knapp. The research scoured the genomes of kea and its sister species kākā, which is adapted to life in the forest, for any genes known to be involved in adaptation to life in the mountains. Keep reading...
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Subscribe and support local journalism
The new issue of NZGeo is a belter, featuring a massive 36-page feature on the tuna industry which was more than five years in the making. Don't miss out—get your copy in stores now... or better still, subscribe. While advertising and retail income goes up and down, it is subscriptions from readers like you that power long-term journalism projects from around New Zealand and help us keep the lights on.
It's not as much as you think—$8.50 every two months for digital, $12 for print or $16.50 for both... a gold coin a week. Check out the options.
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Fossilised poo, a valuable discovery
In the summer of 2015, in a remote valley of Fiordland National Park, two scientists discover fossil poo fragments underneath a limestone overhang. Analysis suggests the fragments are from moa and are thousands of years old, so a team returns—three years later—to excavate. What they find is a rich deposit of moa poo—called coprolites—that accumulated over a period of two millennia, probably between 6800 and 4600 years ago. But what use is old poo? Scientists can carefully examine the pollen, seeds, DNA and plant microfossils in coprolites to determine what kind of food fuelled the nine moa species that roamed the country. Keep reading...
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Better Ancestors: Project Jonah, the programme training volunteers to save marine mammals
Aotearoa / New Zealand has one of the world’s highest rates of whale standings, and hundreds of whales can beach themselves at one time. During these strandings, it is the highly skilled volunteer medics, trained by Project Jonah, who offer the best care possible. By directing the public on how to help and maintain personal safety, these volunteers are able to keep stranded whales from overheating and, if possible, return them to the water. Watch the video ...
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