Rangipo Desert

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Template:Short description Script error: No such module "redirect hatnote". Template:Use New Zealand English Template:Refimprove Template:Infobox landform Te Onetapu (Template:IPAc-mi), commonly known as the Rangipo Desert (Template:IPAc-mi), is a barren desert-like environment located in New Zealand, located in the Ruapehu District on the North Island Volcanic Plateau; to the east of the three active peaks of Mount Tongariro, Mount Ngauruhoe, and Mount Ruapehu, and to the west of the Kaimanawa Range.

Etymology

Two main names have been given to the desert, both of which are derived from te reo Māori and describe the area's history. The first of these, Te Onetapu, is derived from the words Script error: No such module "Lang". - beach or sand, and Script error: No such module "Lang". - sacred. This name refers to the death of Taiteariki, an ancestor of the Ngāti Rangi iwi who was killed at a location in the desert in early Māori history after conflict arose between him and two children of Houmea, Tura and Rotuia.[1][2]

Following Pākehā settlement and expansion into the region, the desert became known as Rangipo, from the Māori words Script error: No such module "Lang"., meaning sky, and Script error: No such module "Lang"., meaning night or darkness. This name references the story of Ngātoro-i-rangi, a Script error: No such module "Lang". and ancestor of Ngāti Tūwharetoa who explored the region in search of land for his people. According to legend, Ngātoro-i-rangi saw explorers from the Tākitimu Script error: No such module "Lang". while camping on Mount Tongariro, and pleaded to Ruaumoko for help defending the area from the encroachment. Ruaumoko responded by causing Mount Ngauruhoe to erupt, darkening the sky and enveloping the new party in smoke and ash.[3]

In 2019, the desert's original name of Te Onetapu was officially restored as part of a Treaty of Waitangi settlement between the Crown and Ngāti Rangi.[4]

File:Rangipo.jpg
Typical Rangipo scenery, looking west from the Desert Road

Geography and climate

The Rangipo Desert receives Template:Convert of rainfall per year, but resembles a desert because of its location on the volcanic plateau adjacent to and east of Ruapehu, poor soil quality and drying winds,[5] and also due to the mass sterilisation of seeds during a series of violent eruptions, particularly ignimbrite flows about 20,000 years ago. The vegetation is low and sparse, consisting of mainly tussock and snow grasses. The headwaters of many small streams, which later turn into large rivers, gouge deep serrated valleys through the unconsolidated ash and pumice-rich earth. The climate here is harsh and alpine, with close to 270 ground frosts per year in comparison with fewer than 30 in the coastal regions of Hawke's Bay, Template:Convert to the east. Heavy snowfalls - rarely seen in the rest of the island - are also a common occurrence in winter. Trampers and climbers in the area should be mindful of the extreme chill effect of the cold south wind which can produce wind chill factors lowering the temperature below 0°C (32°F) for days on end.

Much of the desert lies at an altitude of over Template:Convert, and a considerable proportion of it is over Template:Convert above sea level. Many of the North Island's largest rivers have their headwaters in the area, particularly around the slopes of Mount Ruapehu, the North Island's highest mountain. These include the Waikato and Whangaehu Rivers, as well as major tributaries of the Rangitikei and Whanganui Rivers.

Human interaction

The region is largely uninhabited, possibly due to the unproductive nature of the extreme winter climate. One account of crossing the desert from an early Pākehā explorer in the region described it as "a most desolate and weird-looking spot... a fit place for Macbeth's witches, or Faustus's Brocken scene."[6] The town of Waiouru, with its army camp, lies to the south and much of the southern part of the desert is used for training purposes. To the north of the desert lies the Rangipo prison farm.

The desert is bisected by only one sealed road, a section of State Highway 1 known as the Desert Road. The road is closed with barrier arms for short periods most winters, due to severe snow storms and icy road conditions. Turangi emergency services monitor the northern part of the Desert Road, and the NZDF Military Police at Waiouru are responsible for the southern end. The boundary between the Waikato and Manawatū-Whanganui regions intersects the Desert Road at its summit, which at Template:Cvt above sea level is the highest pass on the New Zealand State Highway network.

The Lord of the Rings films were shot in New Zealand, and the Black Gate of Mordor scenes were shot in the Rangipo Desert in 2000.

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References

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External links

Template:Deserts Template:Tongariro National Park Template:Tolkien tourism

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