Hen and Chicken Islands
Template:Short description Template:Use New Zealand English Template:Use dmy dates Template:Infobox islands
The Hen and Chicken Islands, usually known as the Hen and Chickens, lie to the east of the North Auckland Peninsula off the coast of northern New Zealand. They lie Template:Convert east of Bream Head and Template:Convert south-east of WhangāreiTemplate:R with a total area of Template:Convert.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
HistoryEdit
Approximately 18,000 years ago during the Last Glacial Maximum when sea levels were over Template:Convert lower than present day levels, the islands were hilly features surrounded by a vast coastal plain. Sea levels began to rise 7,000 years ago, after which the islands separated from the rest of New Zealand.<ref name="Niwa">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
These islands were given their European name by Captain James Cook, who first sighted them on 25 November 1769.Template:R It has been suggested that the name was inspired by an old name for the star cluster usually known as the Pleiades.Template:Citation needed
Originally owned by the Māori Ngā Puhi iwi, they were sold to the New Zealand Government in 1883.Template:R The islands were made a scenic reserve in 1908 owing to the rarity of their flora and fauna, and became a wildlife refuge in 1953. Hen Island had actually passed from Māori hands a few years earlier, being bought by Thomas Outhwaite in 1872.Template:R It was bequeathed to the nation by his daughter Isa Outhwaite in 1927, and it too was named as a scenic reserve.Template:RTemplate:R
In June 1940, the Canadian-Australasian ship Template:Ship sank off the islands after hitting a mine.Template:R Most of the cargo, which included gold bullion, was later salvaged.
EnvironmentEdit
The islands are noted for their bird life with colonies of seabirds as well as forest birds which have become scarce or extinct on the mainland. The islands have been identified as an Important Bird Area, by BirdLife International because they are home to a breeding population of about 500 pairs of Pycroft's petrels.Template:RTemplate:R There are also native reptiles on the islands, including tuatara, geckos and skinks.
The islandsEdit
Hen Island, or Template:Langx, lies Template:Convert to the southwest from the rest of the archipelago. It is also considerably larger than the Chicken Islands, or {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}, which comprise a chain of six small islands running north-west to south-east to the north of Hen Island. The chain consists of {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} and {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} Islands (together called North West Chicken), {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} (West Chicken), Lady Alice Island or {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} (Big Chicken), {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} (Middle Chicken), and Coppermine Island (Eastern Chicken).
Taranga (Hen) IslandEdit
{{#invoke:Lang|lang}} is the largest island by some considerable margin, totalling Template:Convert. Long and thin, it has a length of Template:Convert and an average width of less than Template:Convert. A remnant of a four-million-year-old volcano, the island is dominated by a rocky ridge reaching to about Template:Convert at its highest point, called The Pinnacles. Sail Rock, a stack, rises from the ocean Template:Convert to the south of Hen Island,Template:R and is a prominent navigational point for yachts.Template:R
By the late 1800s, Hen Island was the only place in New Zealand with a surviving population of North Island saddleback. The once common species of forest bird found in the North Island, was nearly wiped out by the human introduction of mammalian predators, such as rats and stoats. In the 1960s translocations of saddleback from Hen Island to other island sanctuaries around New Zealand began.Template:RTemplate:R
Wareware and MuriwhenuaEdit
Two small rocky islands with a combined area of Template:Convert.
MauitahaEdit
This Template:Convert, rugged, scrub-covered rock lies Template:Convert to the south of Muriwhenua. It rises to Template:Convert. An unofficial name until 1970 was West Chicken Island.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
The New Zealand Department of Conservation and the Ngati Wai iwi have entered into partnership to set up a sanctuary for the Polynesian rat, or kiore, on the islands Mauitaha and Araara. A spokesman for Ngati Wai said the kiore heritage will be protected as the movement of the kiore through the Pacific paralleled the migration of the New Zealand Maori. A spokesman for the Department of Conservation said the department's policy change from eradication would assist scientific research.
Lady Alice IslandEdit
Named after Lady Alice Fergusson (wife of Governor General Sir Charles Fergusson), it is the largest of the five Chickens and is of particular significance because of its flora and fauna. The island covers Template:Convert and is surrounded by rocky reefs. It was occupied by Māori until the 1820s, and was used as a base for fishermen in the 1890s. Cattle were introduced at about this time, but were removed in the 1920s.
WhatupukeEdit
Formerly known as Whakahau this island is composed of a large eastern section and a peninsula to the southwest. The coast of the peninsula forms one of the chain's main land features, a Template:Convert wide bay (Starfish Bay). The island covers Template:Convert, and is steep, rising to Template:Convert.
Coppermine IslandEdit
Coppermine island formerly known as Mauipane covers an area of Template:Convert. It is composed of two sections joined by a short isthmus. As the name suggests, there are copper deposits on the island, but attempts at mining them in 1849 and 1898 proved unprofitable.
GalleryEdit
- Hen and Chicken Islands.jpg
Hen and Chicken Islands from Department of Conservation Campsite, Uretiti, New Zealand.
- Hen and Chickens (48753380661) (cropped).jpg
Hen and Chickens, 1920 watercolour by Kate Gow