Home  -->  Places:  -->  Te Ahuahu
Id:
ZLV/BOI-007
Name
Class
Volcano
Description
Te Ahuahu is a 373 m (1,224 ft) high andesitic basaltic scoria cone to the east of Lake Ōmāpere, in the Kaikohe-Bay of Islands volcanic field in New Zealand. "In the last half-million years, 12 small basalt volcanoes have erupted in the southern part of the field (Smith et al. 1993), forming a cluster of scoria cones around Kaikohe. Te Puke volcano erupted in the hills behind Waitangi 100 000 years ago, forming three small cones and a spreading flow that now underlies Waitangi golf course and treaty grounds. The youngest volcano is Tauanui, 10 km south of Kaikohe, which 60 000 years ago produced a high scoria cone and a lava flow that flowed 19 km down the Taheke Valley towards the Hokianga Harbour. The field includes a small rhyolite dome (Putahi), overlooking Lake Omapere. The field should still be considered dormant, and not extinct."
Radius of Activation Zone
Within 0.8km
Public access to AZ
Via public road(s): Hariru Road; State Highway 1; 6 unnamed road(s)
Field Name
Kaikohe-Bay of Islands Volcanic Field
Height
356
Date Range
60.0k years ago
Eon
Phanerozoic
Era
Cenozoic
Period
Quaternary
Epoch
Pleistocene
Lies within
Region
Location
NZTM2000: 1676474, 6088806 (alt: 356m)
Maidenhead
RF64wp
Active?
Yes
Valid for NZART awards?
No
Valid From
1900-01-01
First activation

Links:
 

Chased by:
ZL1RQZL1SGZL2MHZL2WE
Activated by:
ZL2SEA
Logged here:
1 Activations (View) 4 Contacts (View)

Photos of this place

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Humps
[ZL1/HNL-038] Te Ahuahu

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