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Taupō Swamp

PoriruaSwamps of OceaniaWetlands of the Wellington Region
Taupo swamp 12
Taupo swamp 12

Taupō Swamp is a lowland freshwater swamp located three kilometres (1.9 mi) north of Plimmerton and 20 kilometres (12 mi) north-northeast of Wellington. In 1986 the Queen Elizabeth II National Trust purchased Taupō Swamp with the aim of both protecting and restoring the wetland. Taupō Swamp is home to largely indigenous vegetation including sedges, flax, ferns, shrubs, herbaceous plants, and grasses. Flax leaves shelter and shade the swamp providing a habitat that is favourable for eels and native fish including galaxiid species. There are invasive plant species present that threaten the swamp including Darwin's barberry, Blackberry, Gorse, Broom, Pussy Willow and Japanese honeysuckle. Another possible threat is development of nearby land as this may cause silt to run off into the swamp as well as fire.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Taupō Swamp (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Taupō Swamp
Steyne Avenue, Porirua Plimmerton

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Wikipedia: Taupō SwampContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N -41.083333333333 ° E 174.86666666667 °
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Address

Plimmerton

Steyne Avenue 31
5026 Porirua, Plimmerton
Wellington, New Zealand
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Taupo swamp 12
Taupo swamp 12
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Titahi Bay Transmitter
Titahi Bay Transmitter

The Titahi Bay Transmitter, which until 16 February 2016 was New Zealand's second tallest structure, transmitted AM radio signals from a 220 metres tall radio mast insulated against ground at Titahi Bay in New Zealand. The station which previously had three masts, now consists of only one mast with a height of 137 metres. A third – smaller – mast with a height of 53 metres was toppled on 10 November 2015. The tower's surrounding buildings were opened in 1937. Five radio programmes broadcast on four frequencies from the tower: Radio New Zealand National on 567 kHz Star and AM Network on 657 kHz Newstalk ZB on 1035 kHz Te Upoko O Te Ika on 1161 kHzIn 2004 the tower was refurnished, badly corroded parts were removed and replaced, the whole tower was sand-blasted and repainted, and an array of LED warning lights were added at the behest of the NZCAA.According to workers refurbishing it, scaling the tower takes 45 minutes. From the top there are views of the entire Kapiti coast region.The site formerly transmitted Radio New Zealand's shortwave service, these broadcasts used a series of shorter free-standing masts supporting curtain arrays.Under the right conditions, the AM signal for National Radio can be received as far north as Norfolk Island and as far south as Dunedin.The Department of Conservation owns the land surrounding the tower, which is leased to Radio NZ for the transmitting towers, to the local Titahi Golf Club, and as farm land. The site is located within Whitirea Park, and is planned to come under the control of the Greater Wellington Regional Council.Only in recent years has the station's emergency power generator been replaced. The previous one, supplied by the American military after the Second World War, formed part of the driving machinery of a submarine which was no longer required.The site was never used for overseas telephone links, which (before the advent of undersea cables and satellites) were provided by two New Zealand Post Office radio stations, Makara Radio (receiving) west of Wellington and Himatangi radio station (transmitting) near Himatangi Beach. Only a limited number of voice circuits were available, and overseas toll calls were expensive.