000 02241cam a2200373 i 4500
999 _c44355
_d44355
001 on1109987556
003 OCoLC
005 20200109134408.0
008 160613t20192019nz a f000 0 eng
020 _a9781988514901
_q(paperback)
020 _a1988514908
029 0 _aNLNZL
_b9918779166302836
035 _a(OCoLC)1109987556
040 _aNZ1
_beng
_erda
_cNZ1
_dOCLCO
_dOCLCQ
_dOCLCF
_dOCLCA
_dUY0
_dNZIPP
042 _anznb
043 _au-nz---
050 1 4 _aDU486.8
_b.P43 2019
082 0 4 _a993.96
_223
100 _aPeat, Neville,
_eauthor.
_930572
245 1 0 _aWhenua Hou, a new land :
_bthe story of Codfish Island /
_cNeville Peat.
260 _aInvercargill :
_bDepartment of Conservation in association with the Whenua Hou Committee,
_c2019.
300 _a79 pages :
_billustrations (chiefly colour) ;
_c24 cm
505 0 _aA new land -- Ancestral echoes ; Whakanoa Pouwhenua, unveiling of three new pou ; Ngā Uri, the descendants: Atholl Anderson CNZM ; Jane Davis MNZM (1930-2019) ; Michael Skerrett QSM ; Dave Taylor ; Helen Brown -- The sealing community -- From sale to scenic reserve -- The coming of kākāpō -- Management -- Buried heritage -- Future footprints.
520 _a"Whenua Hou Codfish Island, largest of Rakiura's satellite islands, is best known as a wildlife sanctuary, with kākāpō, the critically endangered parrot, centre stage. But the Foveaux Strait island has an even greater claim to fame - as the first foothold of bicultural Aotearoa New Zealand 200 years ago. From the early 1800s, European sealers and their Māori wives were raising families on the island, which the sealers knew as Codfish. It gained another name as a result of the mixed-race settlement: Whenua Hou, New Land"--Inside front flap.
650 0 _aKāi Tahu (New Zealand people)
_zNew Zealand
_zCodfish Island.
_946225
650 0 _avation of natural resources
_zNew Zealand
_zCodfish Island.
_946226
650 7 _aConservation of natural resources.
_2fast
650 0 _aKōrero nehe.
_2reo
_941721
650 0 _aWhakapapa
_2reo
_927774
650 0 _aKaitiakitanga.
_2reo
_935589
651 0 _aCodfish Island (N.Z.)
_xHistory.
_946227
942 _2ddc
_cNZNONFIC
948 _hNO HOLDINGS IN NZWMT - 12 OTHER HOLDINGS