Te Korowai-o-Te-Tonga Peninsula

Te Korowai-o-Te-Tonga Peninsula
Te Korowai-o-Te-Tonga Peninsula seen from the Space Shuttle Discovery in 2000
Te Korowai-o-Te-Tonga Peninsula seen from the Space Shuttle Discovery in 2000
Te Korowai-o-Te-Tonga Peninsula is located in New Zealand
Te Korowai-o-Te-Tonga Peninsula
Location in the Auckland Region
Coordinates: 36°32′S 174°15′E / 36.53°S 174.25°E / -36.53; 174.25
LocationAuckland Region, New Zealand
Area
 • Total339.72 square kilometres (131.17 sq mi)
Population2,890 as of June 2023[1]

Te Korowai-o-Te-Tonga Peninsula, also known as South Head and by its former name of the South Kaipara Peninsula, is a long peninsula in the North Island of New Zealand, extending north along the western edge of the Kaipara Harbour for some 35 kilometres (22 mi) from near Helensville to the harbour's mouth. The peninsula was officially renamed in 2013 as part of a Treaty of Waitangi settlement.[2] The name, which is Māori for "The cloak of the south", reflects the peninsula's geographical role in guarding the southern half of the Kaipara Harbour from the Tasman Sea and prevailing westerly winds. The mouth of the Kaipara Harbour separates the peninsula from the larger Pouto Peninsula to the north.

  1. ^ "Population estimate tables - NZ.Stat". Statistics New Zealand. Retrieved 25 October 2023.
  2. ^ "Notice of New and Altered Geographic Names, and Altered Crown Protected Area Names, for Ngati Whatua o Kaipara Treaty of Waitangi Settlement 2013," New Zealand Gazette, 25 July 2013. Retrieved 30 April 2019.