Jump to content

Waitomo Caves

Coordinates: 38°15′38.34″S 175°06′12.02″E / 38.2606500°S 175.1033389°E / -38.2606500; 175.1033389
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Jllm06 (talk | contribs) at 15:33, 27 September 2016 (removed Category:Show caves; added Category:Show caves in New Zealand using HotCat). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

A cave entrance in the area.

The Waitomo Caves is a village and solutional cave system forming a major tourist attraction in the northern King Country region of the North Island of New Zealand, 12 kilometres northwest of Te Kuiti. The community of Waitomo Caves itself is very small, though the village has many temporary service workers living there as well. The word Waitomo comes from the Māori language wai meaning water and tomo meaning a doline or sinkhole; it can thus be translated to be water passing through a hole.[1] The caves are formed in Oligocene limestone.[2]

Caving

Early history

The limestone landscape of the Waitomo District area has been the centre of increasingly popular commercial caving tourism from as early as 1900. Initially mostly consisting of impromptu trips guided by local Māori, large sections of cave near Waitomo Caves were later taken over by the Crown and managed as a (relatively genteel) tourism attraction from 1904 onwards.[3] A 1915 guide said, "It is reached by railway to Hangatiki, thence 6 miles by coach along a good road".[4]

Modern days

Today, a number of companies, large and small, specialise in leading tourists through the caves of the area, from easily accessible areas with hundreds of tourists per hour in the peak season, to extreme sports-like crawls into cave systems which are only seen by a few tourists each day. A visit to Waitomo Caves made Number 14 amongst a list of 101 "Kiwi must-do's" in a New Zealand Automobile Association poll of over 20,000 motorists published 2007,[5] and in 2004, around 400,000 visitors entered caves in the area.[3]

Main caves

The main caves in the area are the Waitomo Glowworm Caves, Ruakuri Cave,[6] Aranui Cave, and Gardner's Gut. They are noted for their stalactite and stalagmite displays, and for the presence of glowworms (the fungus gnat Arachnocampa luminosa).[7]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Waitomo Caves". Encyclopedia of New Zealand (1966).
  2. ^ "The Geological History of New Zealand". Retrieved 16 May 2014.
  3. ^ a b Caving tourism (from Te Ara Encyclopedia of New Zealand)
  4. ^ Bradbury, E E (1915). The Raglan and Kawhia Districts. Waikato University library: Bradbury. p. 85.
  5. ^ Dye, Stuart (10 February 2007). "Peaks, sounds, parks and islands tops in Kiwi eyes". The New Zealand Herald. Retrieved 1 December 2011.
  6. ^ http://www.waitomo.com/ruakuri-cave/Pages/default.aspx
  7. ^ Glowworm Caves, Waitomo (from the Waitomo Caves information website 'waitomo-caves.com')


38°15′38.34″S 175°06′12.02″E / 38.2606500°S 175.1033389°E / -38.2606500; 175.1033389