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Little Barrier Island

Little Barrier Island
Māori: Te Hauturu-o-Toi
Nickname: Hauturu
Little Barrier.JPG
View from the mainland
Little Barrier Island is located in New Zealand
Little Barrier Island
Little Barrier Island
Geography
Location Hauraki Gulf, Auckland Region
Area 28 km2 (11 sq mi)
Length 7.5 km (4.66 mi)
Width 5.5 km (3.42 mi)
Highest elevation 722 m (2,369 ft)
Highest point Mount Hauturu
Administration
Demographics
Population No permanent inhabitants
Additional information
Wildlife sanctuary

Little Barrier Island, or Hauturu in Māori language (the official Māori title is Te Hauturu-o-Toi), lies off the northeastern coast of New Zealand's North Island. Located 80 kilometres (50 mi) to the north of Auckland, the island is separated from the mainland to the west by Jellicoe Channel, and from the larger Great Barrier Island to the east by Cradock Channel. The two aptly named islands shelter the Hauraki Gulf from many of the storms of the Pacific Ocean.

Settled by the Maori sometime between 1350 and 1650, the island was occupied by those people until the New Zealand government declared the island a wildlife sanctuary in 1897. Since the island came under control of the government, it has been under limited access, with only a few rangers living on the island. In the Māori language, the name of the island name means "the resting place of lingering breezes". Along with its larger neighbour Great Barrier, it was given its English name by Captain James Cook in 1769.

The island is a nature sanctuary which has been described by the MBIE as "the most intact [native] ecosystem in New Zealand". However, several invasive species were introduced by both Maori and European settlers, including cats which are destructive to local small bird and reptile species.

Māori occupied the island for centuries prior to the first European visits, probably first settling on the island between 1350 and 1650 CE. The initial occupation was by descendants of Toi te Huatahi, followed by Tainui who were then conquered by the Ngāti Wai. Only a few Ngāti Wai were still living on the island by 1881 and the British Crown attempted to buy the island in order to turn it into a nature reserve. When this purchase fell through, the island was instead appropriated through an Act of Parliament in 1894 and became New Zealand's first nature reserve the following year. Since 1897, there has always been a caretaker or ranger resident on the island.


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