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Locations near Stewart Island:
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Stewart
Island/Rakiura is the third-largest island of New Zealand. It lies
30 kilometres (19 mi) south of the
South Island, across
Foveaux Strait. Its permanent population is slightly over 400 people, most
of whom live in the settlement of Oban.
Stewart Island/Rakiura is the southernmost
and smallest (about 75km long and up to 45km wide). It is also the
least modified- the least logged, least farmed, least burnt, and least
built upon.
Together with its 170 satellite islands and
inlets, it retains a largely intact set of natural habitats ranging from
dense coastal rainforest to tundra-like alpine vegetation.
Rakiura is the more commonly known and used Māori name. It is usually translated
as Glowing Skies, possibly a reference to the sunsets for which it is
famous or for the Aurora Australis, the southern lights that are a phenomenon of
southern latitudes.
Over 80 per cent of the island is set aside as the Rakiura National Park, New
Zealand's newest national park.
Other landscape features include the unique
southern granite domes, Mason Bay's
extensive dunelands, the expansive Freshwater wetlands, Mt Anglem's twin lakes, and numerous small
forest-lined rivers stained brown by tannin.
Human settlement is confined to a small
area on the northeast coast centred on Halfmoon Bay and the township of
Oban.
Native forest embraces the settlement and its 24km or roads, creating an
attractive natural setting.
There are passenger and freight links with
South Island (1 hour by catamaran from Oban to Bluff, 20 min to
Invercargill Airport by light aircraft). Economic activity on the
island is dominated by three sectors – fishing/fish processing, tourism
and marine farming.
There is regular daily schedule air services from Invercargill airport
to Oban. |