6-672: Mahurangi Island , is an island at the mouth of the Waiwera River , in the Auckland Region , New Zealand. Mahurangi Island is a 49-metre tall island located in the Hauraki Gulf at the mouth of the Waiwera River . The island was originally known by the name Motu Mahurangi, and is a place of importance to Ngāti Manuhiri . The island was named by the crew of the Tainui migratory canoe, after an elderly woman who lived in
12-499: The Wenderholm Regional Park . Waiwera River (Auckland) The Waiwera River is a stream of the Auckland Region of New Zealand 's North Island , near the township of Waiwera . The river begins in rural Rodney , flowing east. After flowing past Meales Hill, the river widens to a tidal estuary, flowing into the Hauraki Gulf between the Wenderholm Regional Park and the town of Waiwera. The mouth of
18-460: The homeland of the Tainui people, remaining there. Mahurangi was a revered figure, who was able to ensure that the voyage to Aotearoa was possible through her skill. Eventually, the name Mahurangi began to be applied to the wider area to the north, between Matakana and Waiwera . Tāmaki Māori people constructed a defensive pā on the island, likely in the 1600s. Today, the island forms a part of
24-478: The inland ara (walking tracks) by waka . The wider area was traditionally known as Mahurangi, named after the Mahurangi Island. The river is the location where a battle between Ngāti Manuhiri and Ngāti Manaia ( Ngāpuhi ) occurred, and later the place where Tukituki of Ngāti Manuhiri and Rangihokaia, a rangatira of Ngāti Manaia, were wed in a peace-making agreement. An area of the southern shores
30-466: The river is the tidal Waiwera Estuary, which is dominated by mangroves. Mahurangi Island is found in the Hauraki Gulf at the mouth of the river. The river is within the rohe of both Ngāti Manuhiri , who descend from Te Kawerau , and Ngāti Rongo, a hapū of Ngāti Whātua who came to the area from Hokianga . It was traditionally known as Awa Waiwerawera, and was used as a way to access
36-545: Was purchased by Scottish entrepreneur Robert Graham from Ngāti Rongo in 1844, where he established the Waiwera Hot Pools . The hot pools became a popular tourist destination in the 1870s, and people would be ferried to the resort along the river by John Sullivan, an early pioneer in the area. The Waiwera Wastewater Treatment Plant was established in 1974 along the Waiwera River, receiving waste water from
#861138