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Hōteo River

River in the Auckland Region, New Zealand


River in the Auckland Region, New Zealand

FieldValue
nameHōteo River
native_nameTe Awa o Hōteo
imageMangakura Inlet.jpg
image_size270px
image_captionThe Hōteo River as it reaches the Mangakura Inlet
mapframeyes
mapframe-zoom10
mapframe-wikidatayes
mapframe-pointnone
map_size270px
mapframe-captionRoute of the Hōteo River
pushpin_mapAuckland#New Zealand
pushpin_map_size270px
pushpin_map_captionMouth of the Hōteo River
subdivision_type1Country
subdivision_name1New Zealand
subdivision_type2Region
subdivision_name2Auckland Region
length52 km
discharge1_avg11 m3/s
source1_locationConfluence of the Whangaripo Stream and Waiteitei Stream
source1_coordinates
mouthMangakura Inlet
mouth_coordinates
progressionHōteo River → Mangakura Inlet → Kaipara Harbour → Tasman Sea
basin_size405 km2
tributaries_leftWaiwhiu Stream, Awarere Stream, Kaitoto Stream, Mangatu Stream
bridgesMangakura Bridge

| mapframe-zoom = 10 | mapframe-wikidata = yes | mapframe-point = none | mapframe-caption = Route of the Hōteo River

The Hōteo River is a river of the Auckland Region of New Zealand. It flows southwest from its sources close to the North Auckland Peninsula's east coast before emptying into the southern lobe of the Kaipara Harbour.

Description

The headwaters of the Hōteo River is the Waitapu Stream that starts within 5 km of the East Coast and the system drains out into the West Coast of Northland. The Hoteo forms at the confluence of the Whangaripo and Waiteitei streams, flowing southwest through the Wayby Valley.

State Highway 1 crosses the river at Wayby, south of Wellsford and State Highway 16 crosses the river near Mangakura where it discharges into the Kaipara Harbour. The North Auckland Rail Line crosses the Hoteo River three times within 1.5 km; to the north of Kaipara Flats.

The river enters the Kaipara Harbour near the town of Glorit. The lower reaches of the river are popular with whitebaiters and recreational fishermen and the river also hosts the annual Hōteo River Raft Race, a no-holds-barred event.

Two waterfalls are found on the Hōteo River to the east of Mangakura: the Tarakihi Rapids and the Paraua Rapids.

Geology

The river is an antecedent drainage stream. The river began flowing when the surrounding lands were a low-lying plain. Over time, the surrounding land was uplifted, but the Hoteo River retained the same course, creating a gorge through the uplifting rock.

History

The Hōteo River was a traditional rohe (border) marker for the iwi (tribe) Ngāti Manuhiri's northernmost lands.

The river mouth is a mooring point for motorboats, and the river is navigable 7.6 km inland from the Mangakura Bridge as far as the Paraua and Tarakihi rapids, two rapid systems which only exist at low tide.

References

References

  1. (1981). "New Zealand Recreational River Survey Part II North Island Rivers". Water & Soil Division, Ministry of Works and Development.
  2. (August 2014). "Hoteo River Catchment: Environment and Socio-economic Review".
  3. {{LINZ
  4. {{LINZ
  5. {{LINZ
  6. (2017). "Out of the Ocean, Into the Fire". Geoscience Society of New Zealand.
  7. (21 May 2011). "Deed of Settlement of Historical Claims". [[New Zealand Government]].
Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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