District Plan Hauraki Gulf Islands Section - Proposed 2006
(Notified version 2006)
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Annexure 1b - The archaeology of the islands
1.0 Introduction
2.0 The archaeological record
3.0 Archaeological research
4.0 Early settlement
5.0 Development of social networks
6.0 Warfare and defence
7.0 European settlement
8.0 The Hauraki Gulf archaeology project
9.0 Glossary of archaeological terms
1.0 Introduction
The significance of the inner gulf to both Maori and 
early European settlement is evident in traditional histories passed 
down orally from one generation to another and in the written records 
made after the arrival of Europeans. Traditional histories record some 
of the major events in the gulf's history: the arrival of ocean-going 
waka (canoes), the struggles for dominance and the relationships between 
different iwi and the impacts of European colonization. However, details 
of the economies and lifestyles of the people who lived here before 
the arrival of Europeans are rarely recorded in oral traditions, and 
information on aspects of daily life recorded by early European settlers 
at the time of contact is limited and not always reliable. The written 
record relating to early European settlement provides more detail, but 
only part of the story.
2.0 The archaeological 
record
Archaeological sites provide the physical expression 
of the Hauraki Gulf's history and reveal information not known from 
the oral or written histories of the area. Some archaeological sites 
are considered waahi tapu (sacred places) by iwi, in addition to being 
significant repositories of archaeological information.
The most common archaeological sites found in the Hauraki 
Gulf - middens - are part of a historical landscape that extends not 
only across the islands but through time as well. Some date back to 
the very earliest period of settlement. They exemplify the importance 
of understanding and recording archaeological remains, even when they 
do not seem to be significant or very visible features within the landscape. 
Middens are made up of food remains (predominantly shellfish remains, 
but also the bones of fish, birds and marine mammals). Collectively 
and in some cases individually they can provide a great deal of information 
on subsistence, the environment at the time and, through dating and 
comparative studies, the history of settlement and the impact of humans 
on the environment. 
Other commonly identified archaeological features include 
pits (the remains of structures for storing kumara and other produce) 
and terraces (areas levelled for house sites or agriculture). Concentrations 
of these features may indicate the presence of a kainga (settlement 
site). Pa are the most complex of the Maori sites with their defensive 
earthworks, use of natural defences and strategic locations. They often 
contain a full range of archaeological features - living terraces, pits 
and middens as well as defensive ditches and banks. 
The islands also contain the archaeological remains 
of early European settlement, many relating to farm settlements and 
the exploitation of natural resources (mining and the timber industry). 
Historic remains of European settlement in the 19th and early 20th century 
in the islands are also visible in the form of military, maritime, domestic 
and industrial structures. 
3.0 Archaeological 
research
The islands in the Hauraki Gulf vary in size, geology 
and the number and diversity of their archaeological sites. Over 750 
sites are recorded on Waiheke, the largest of the inner gulf islands, 
350 or so sites on Motutapu, 70 on Ponui, 70 on Motukorea (Browns Island), 
70 on Motuihe, 30 on Rakino, 12 on Rangitoto's volcanic cone, around 
20 on Rotoroa, and 5 on Pakatoa. In the outer gulf, Great Barrier and 
the surrounding islands contain c.800 sites, Little Barrier c.80, and 
a number have been recorded on the Mokohinau islands. The high number 
of sites confirms the significance of the islands to New Zealand's heritage 
and also reflects the active approach that archaeologists have taken 
to site recording and investigation in the region.
The first detailed archaeological investigations were 
carried out in the 1950s when Jack Golson excavated the deeply stratified 
site at Pig Bay, Motutapu. Then between 1956 and 1959 V Fisher excavated 
an 'archaic' (early) site at Ponui. From the beginning of archaeological 
recording and research it was recognised that the gulf contains some 
of the earliest evidence for the settlement of New Zealand. 
Archaeological survey and site investigation continued 
sporadically in the following years, with the University of Auckland's 
Department of Anthropology and the archaeologists at the Auckland Institute 
and Museum carrying out most of the work. Significant work included 
the discovery and investigation of the Sunde Site on Motutapu which 
provided evidence of human occupation prior to the eruption of Rangitoto 
c.600 years ago; and the survey of Motutapu by Janet Davidson in the 
late 1960s, recording over 300 sites. 
However, it was not until the late 1980s that a systematic 
programme of investigation of the islands emerged, co-ordinated by Geoff 
Irwin at the Department of Anthropology. Since then Ponui and Motutapu 
have been intensively surveyed and investigated. Gradually as the results 
and materials are analysed, radiocarbon dates extracted for many sites, 
and the evidence considered, a greater understanding of early settlement 
patterns and social behaviour is emerging.
On other islands survey coverage continues to be patchy, 
with some areas well surveyed and others still unexamined. In the years 
since the introduction of the Resource Management Act 1991 more surveys 
and small excavations have been carried out on Waiheke and Rakino as 
part of assessments of environmental effects, but these have been piecemeal 
and development driven. 
While the focus of archaeological site recording in 
the early days was on pre-European remains, in recent years early European 
sites have increasingly been added to the archaeological record. This 
has included recognition of the old homesteads, schools, mines, shipwrecks, 
wharves and jetties that represent the first stages in the transformation 
of the islands into an integral part of modern Auckland, whether used 
for suburban living, recreation or conservation. 
The archaeological research to date has focused on a 
number of key themes. These have included:
  - the islands as an ideal location for the 
early settlement of New Zealand
 
  - the development of social networks across 
the coastal North Island
 
  - warfare and defence - the growing pressures 
on settlement 
 
  - European settlement of the Auckland region.
 
4.0 Early settlement
Perhaps one of the most important and debated themes 
in archaeology is the settlement of New Zealand and when it occurred. 
It is largely accepted that the Polynesians reached New Zealand as a 
result of deliberate exploration and controlled voyaging. Based on linguistic, 
cultural and genetic studies it is clear that New Zealand was settled 
from east Polynesia. The dates for this have been hotly contested but 
it is generally agreed that the first settlers had arrived by c.1200AD. 
The recognition of archaic sites (shell middens particularly rich in 
artefacts) remains central to our understanding of this migration history. 
The number of archaic midden sites on Ponui, Waiheke (Owhiti), Motutapu 
(the Sunde Site), Motukorea (Browns Island), and further out, Great 
Barrier (Harataonga), to name a few, is clear evidence that the islands 
provided ideal environments for these early settlers. 
The apparent preference for initial settlement on the 
islands may be partly explained by the nature of the voyagers' small 
island homelands, but the islands also provided the conditions required 
to establish the tropical cultigens that formed the basis of Polynesian 
horticulture. While New Zealand offered abundant bird and marine life, 
it had no agricultural crops and generally a more temperate climate 
than eastern Polynesia. The islands, however, offered a warmer microclimate 
than the mainland, which enabled the Polynesian cultigens to be propagated 
and the foundation for long-term and more intensive settlement of the 
country to be laid.
Other possible archaic sites that have been identified 
include stone working areas, for example, on Rakino, which show early 
exploitation of the local natural resources.
The archaeology of the Sunde site on Motutapu revealed 
occupation beneath the ash associated with the 14th century appearance 
of Rangitoto. Footprints in the volcanic ash indicated that the occupants 
of the island returned after the eruption to witness the devastation 
of their former settlement. Archaeological deposits dating to before 
and after the eruption of Rangitoto show a change in local flora and 
fauna, with decimation of the birdlife due to the destruction of Motutapu's 
forests. Motutapu archaeological data also contained evidence of now 
extinct species such as the giant eagle. Archaeological evidence from 
after the eruption indicated that agriculture later played a significant 
role on Motutapu, and the volcanic ash would have improved soil fertility.
5.0 Development 
of social networks
The islands do not show a pattern of isolated settlement 
by Maori, instead the sites formed an interconnected group. The archaeology 
of the islands shows that there was considerable movement of people 
and goods between the islands, Coromandel Peninsula, Auckland isthmus, 
and Northland. 
Analysis of archaeological materials shows that obsidian 
was taken to the islands from as far away as Mayor Island in the Bay 
of Plenty, and high quality argillite was being obtained from the South 
Island. The early sites on Ponui, Waiheke and Motutapu also had significant 
artefacts made from moa bone, although there is no indication that these 
birds were ever present on the islands. A high quality stone (greywacke) 
from Motutapu was exchanged widely throughout different regions, as 
well as being used locally. 
6.0 Warfare and 
defence
As the human population increased there was greater 
pressure on the rich resources of the islands and the density and distribution 
of sites identified in the archaeological record increased both in number 
and size. Pa sites started to appear in the 16th century in strategic 
locations around the islands, with a range of defensive systems constantly 
adapting to local conditions. Around 90-100 pa are recorded throughout 
the inner islands and around 50 on the outer islands. 
The islands' pa reflect not only the socio-political 
instability of the past but also the islands' strategic value in controlling 
movements through the gulf and beyond. For example Motukorea lies at 
the mouth of the Tamaki River, which provided access through to the 
Manukau via portages (places where waka were dragged across a short 
stretch of land), giving it particular strategic significance. Pa are 
located on headlands throughout the islands to guard the bays, provide 
early warning of the approach and general movement of waka within the 
Hauraki Gulf, and provide a refuge in times of war. 
7.0 European settlement
While fewer than the archaeological sites of the pre-European 
period, a growing number of sites reflecting early European settlement 
and activities are being added to the archaeological record. However, 
none of these sites has been archaeologically excavated yet, although 
archaeologists are increasingly working with historians, architects 
and other heritage groups on recording the 19th and early 20th century 
transformations of the landscape. 
Examples on Waiheke include the remains of a 19th century 
manganese mining operation scattered across the landscape at Awaawaroa. 
At the head of Te Matuku Bay a historic cemetery is a significant reminder 
of one of the early European settlements on the island. There are few 
recorded remains of the significant early boatbuilding and spar extraction 
industries on Waiheke, but there is still the potential to identify 
such sites. Nineteenth-century copper mining and shipbuilding sites 
have been recorded on Great Barrier, as well as late 19th to early 20th 
century sites related to silver and gold mining and the timber industry. 
Early (19th century) farm settlement sites have been recorded on Motuihe, 
Motukorea, Motutapu and Great Barrier. Baches dating to the 1920s and 
1930s are still present on Rangitoto, with associated structures and 
sites, significant remnants of a lifestyle that is gradually disappearing 
in New Zealand. Most dramatic though, are the remnants of large World 
War II gun emplacements at Stony Batter on Waiheke and at Motutapu, 
with a chain of lesser defences on Rangitoto, elsewhere on Motutapu, 
Motuihe and the Mokohinau islands. The lighthouse on Burgess Island 
(in the Mokohinau group) is also a significant historic structure. The 
research potential of all these sites for historical archaeology is 
considerable. 
8.0 The Hauraki 
Gulf archaeology project
While hundreds of archaeological sites have been recorded 
on the islands, the vast majority of these were recorded before the 
days of GPS (global positioning systems). Many were recorded in the 
days of the imperial rather than the metric map system. As a result 
the accuracy of recorded locations was often no more than to within 
100-200m. This meant it was often difficult to relocate sites on the 
ground, especially where vegetation growth or land use had changed significantly 
since the time when the sites were recorded. In these situations it 
can be difficult to establish whether sites are still present in the 
landscape, or have been destroyed or altered in the years since they 
were recorded. 
To remedy this in 2002 Auckland City started an ambitious 
project to upgrade the information about all recorded archaeological 
sites in the islands. The aim is to establish the precise location and 
extent of all known archaeological sites, with their boundaries marked 
on aerial plans and property boundaries overlaid. In addition the archaeological 
significance of each site (its ability to provide information on the 
history of the islands), including its state and condition, are being 
evaluated. This will greatly assist in the protection and sustainable 
management of archaeological sites, and provide much better information 
for landowners about the location and extent of archaeological sites 
on their property.
Development and settlement of some of the islands continues 
at a rapid pace, especially in the coastal areas where most of the archaeological 
sites are located, posing a significant threat to the surviving archaeological 
remains. By improving the information about the recorded archaeological 
sites on the islands, the Hauraki Gulf project will result in better 
management of the archaeological resource to ensure the survival of 
the unique, the significant and the representative for future generations. 
9.0 Glossary 
of archaeological terms
| Term 
 
 | 
Meaning | 
| artefact | 
any object relating to history 
of New Zealand | 
| cultigen | 
plant species or cultivars that 
are completely dependent on domestication and cannot persist other than 
for one or a few growing seasons without renewed human propagation | 
| dendroglyph | 
artwork carved into a tree | 
| ditch | 
any purposely built trench - usually 
refers to parts of the defensive work on pa sites | 
| findspot | 
location where an artefact has 
been found | 
| hangi 
 | 
stone-lined earth oven 
 | 
| kainga 
 | 
undefended habitation site usually 
including archaeological features such as house platforms and storage 
pits 
 | 
| midden 
 | 
prehistoric or historic period 
rubbish dump - in coastal areas these are typically shells from cooking 
pits and often contain other items including hangi stones | 
| modified/made/garden soils | 
evidence of changes to a soil 
purposefully carried out to enhance conditions for horticulture or habitation 
(often includes the addition of shell or stone) | 
| pa 
 | 
Maori fortified location. Built 
in both prehistoric and historic times, pa sites usually contain a large 
number of storage pits, terraces and house platforms, and were fortified 
with combinations of ditches and palisades. Maungakiekie (One Tree Hill) 
is an outstanding example of a pa. 
 | 
| petroglyph | 
artwork carved into stone | 
| pit 
 | 
A purposefully excavated hole 
in the ground. Usually rectangular or sub-rectangular in shape although 
other forms exist. In pre-European times they were most commonly used 
for storing kumara and often covered. Pits may also have other purposes, 
be subterranean (such as in caves and bell-shaped rua) and may also 
refer to such holes dug during colonial times for a variety of purposes. | 
| platform | 
a purposefully levelled area | 
| quarry | 
location of a source of material 
for stonework | 
| rua 
 | 
deep pit used for storing kumara 
usually with a small entrance at the top 
 | 
| stone flaking/working area | 
area with debris from making stone 
tools | 
| terrace 
 | 
excavated and flattened area on 
a slope | 
| urupa | 
Maori burial site |