Lake Rotokawau (Bay of Plenty)

Coordinates: 38°04′24″S 176°22′46″E / 38.07331°S 176.37935°E / -38.07331; 176.37935
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Lake Rotokawau
Aerial view of Lake Rotokawau in 2018
Aerial view of Lake Rotokawau in 2018
Location of Lake Rotokawau
Location of Lake Rotokawau
Lake Rotokawau
LocationBay of Plenty, North Island
Coordinates38°04′24″S 176°22′46″E / 38.07331°S 176.37935°E / -38.07331; 176.37935
Typemaar lake
Primary inflowsWaimata Stream
Primary outflowsWaiohewa Stream
Catchment area2.23 km2 (0.86 sq mi)
Basin countriesNew Zealand
Surface area0.52 km2 (0.20 sq mi)
Average depth43.7 m (143 ft)
Max. depth74 m (243 ft)
Surface elevation320 m (1,050 ft)

Lake Rotokawau is a small volcanic lake 4.1 km (2.5 mi) east of Lake Rotorua in the Bay of Plenty region of New Zealand's North Island. The name is also used for lakes in the Kaipara District (Poutu Peninsula),[1] Chatham Islands,[2] on Aupouri Peninsula[3] and near Lake Waikare in Waikato.[4] Access is via Lake Rotokawau Road, from SH30 at Tikitere (Hell's Gate). The lake is owned and managed by Ngāti Rangiteaorere.[5]

Ecology[edit]

Map

Lake Rotokawau is a small, oligotrophic lake; the best example of what many deep Rotorua lakes were once like. Koaro (Galaxias brevipinnis), banded kokopu (Galaxias fasciatus), long-finned eel (Anguilla dieffenbachia), short-finned eel (Anguilla australis), smelt (Retropinna retropinna) and common bully (Gobiomorphus cotidianus) live in the lake.[5] The catchment is roughly 65% forested and 25% in agriculture.

Geology[edit]

The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The lake is a maar lake,[6][7] formed by an explosion about 4,000 years ago, leaving cliffs of up to The time allocated for running scripts has expired. around the lake. The airfall eruptive volume was The time allocated for running scripts has expired. and covered an area with tephra of The time allocated for running scripts has expired. with a lava eruptive volume of The time allocated for running scripts has expired..[8][9] While the local rocks are rhyolite and pumice, with areas of alluvial sand and silt the formative eruption is one of only two, in a locality dominated by rhyolitic eruptions, recent basaltic fissure eruptions (the other is the 1886 eruption of Mount Tarawera).[10] Tephra from the eruption was dated at 3440 ± 70 years before 1950.[9] The eruption had the characteristics of a basaltic dike as there is a line of eruptive vents[8] almost at right angles to the usual vent alignments of the recently active Ōkataina Caldera. The maar crater is located almost exactly where this alignment intercepts a postulated continuation of the known fault defining the southern limit of the Tikitere Graben. The lake has one major inflow, the Waimata Stream, on the south side and also small geothermal springs on the north-west shore. The lake discharges via groundwater to the Waiohewa Stream, near Tikitere.[5]

References[edit]

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External links[edit]