Kawarau Gorge

Kawarau River flowing through the Kawarau Gorge, immediately downstream from Roaring Meg tributary
Kawarau Gorge with the Kawarau Gorge Suspension Bridge in view.

The Kawarau Gorge is a major river gorge created by the Kawarau River in Central Otago, in the South Island of New Zealand. The towns of Queenstown and Cromwell are linked by State Highway 6 through the gorge.[1]

The gorge begins some 30 kilometres from Queenstown, close to the wine-growing community of Gibbston and the large rock outcrop known as the Nevis Bluff. It continues for some 25 kilometres before the river emerges into the upper valley of the Clutha River close to the settlement of Ripponvale. The gorge is the site of several extreme sports, including bungy jumping at the Kawarau Gorge Suspension Bridge, and white-water sports such as kayaking[2] and riverboarding,[3] and one of only two known areas where the nationally critical endangered fungus weevil Cerius otagensis has been found.[4]

  1. ^ "Kawarau Gorge widening to be completed this week". The New Zealand Herald. 3 March 2008. Retrieved 27 November 2008.
  2. ^ "Otago / Kawarau". NZRCA. Retrieved 27 November 2008.
  3. ^ Harvey, Sarah (30 April 2008). "A Kawarau experience I don't want to repeat". Otago Daily Times. Retrieved 27 November 2008.
  4. ^ Holloway, B.A. (1982). Fauna of New Zealand ([2nd impr.]. ed.). Wellington, N.Z: DSIR. ISBN 0-477-06703-4. Retrieved 21 May 2016.