place

Māngere Mountain

Auckland Region geography stubsAuckland volcanic fieldLookouts in AucklandMountains of the Auckland RegionMāngere-Ōtāhuhu Local Board Area
Te Waiohua
Mangere Mountain Central Crater Cone II
Mangere Mountain Central Crater Cone II

Māngere Mountain is a volcanic cone in Māngere, Auckland. Located within Māngere Domain, it is one of the largest volcanic cones in the Auckland volcanic field, with a peak 106 metres (348 ft) above sea level. It was the site of a major pā (Māori fortified settlement) and many of the pā's earthworks are still visible. It has extensive panoramic views of Auckland from its location in the southeastern portion of the city's urban area. It is also known as Te Pane-o-Mataaho ("the head of Mataaho"), and Te Ara Pueru ("the Path of Dogskin Cloaks").The volcano features two large craters. It has a wide crater with a lava dome near its centre, a feature shared by no other volcano in Auckland. It first erupted approximately 70,000 years ago.The mountain is one of the largest and best preserved of Auckland's volcanic cones. Many archaeological features remain, including kumara pits, garden terraces, walled garden mounds and stone boundary walls.Near the mountain to the southwest is Māngere Lagoon, filling another volcanic crater.

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

Māngere Mountain
Kanohi Terrace, Māngere-Ōtāhuhu Māngere Bridge

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: Māngere MountainContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N -36.9496 ° E 174.7831 °
placeShow on map

Address

Kanohi Terrace
1042 Māngere-Ōtāhuhu, Māngere Bridge
Auckland, New Zealand
mapOpen on Google Maps

Mangere Mountain Central Crater Cone II
Mangere Mountain Central Crater Cone II
Share experience

Nearby Places

Māngere Bridge (suburb)
Māngere Bridge (suburb)

Māngere Bridge is a suburb of Auckland, New Zealand, under the local governance of the Auckland Council. Surrounded by the Manukau Harbour, the area is the most north-western suburb of South Auckland, and is connected to Onehunga in central Auckland by three bridges that cross the Māngere Inlet. Many features of the Auckland volcanic field are found in and around Māngere Bridge, including Māngere Mountain, a 106-metre-high (348 ft) feature in the centre of the suburb, and Māngere Lagoon, a volcanic tidal lagoon opposite Puketutu Island in the harbour. The suburb is also home to Ambury Regional Park, a working farm and nature sanctuary run by Auckland Council, that connects to the Kiwi Esplanade and Watercare Coastal walkways. After being inhabited for hundreds of years by Tāmaki Māori, the area became a Ngāti Mahuta settlement to provide defense of Auckland from the late 1840s until the invasion of the Waikato in 1863. From later in the 19th century, Māngere Bridge became an important rural area for supplying Auckland with produce and dairy, and from the 1920s it became a popular location for Chinese-run market gardens. Māngere Bridge developed suburban housing in the 1950s and 1960s, experiencing growth helped by its proximity to Auckland Airport, which opened in 1966. After the closure of open-air wastewater-treatment ponds in the early 2000s, the part of the harbour surrounding Māngere Bridge underwent significant ecological restoration. The suburb is multicultural; many residents are large families, and the housing stock is dominated by brick-and-tile homes built in the 1960s and 1970s. In 2019, the suburb name was officially gazetted as Māngere Bridge.