District Plan Hauraki Gulf Islands Section - Proposed 2006
(Notified version 2006)
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Annexure 1c - The geology and landforms of the islands
1.0 Introduction
2.0 Basement greywacke rocks, the Waipapa Terrane Group
3.0 Regional subsidence - basal Waitemata Group
4.0 Marine basin sediments - Waitemata flysch basin Group
5.0 Miocene to pleistocene volcanism - includes Coromandel Volcanic Arc Group
6.0 The ice ages and the shape of the islands
7.0 Young volcanoes - Auckland Volcanic Field Group and Auckland lava caves Group
8.0 Geology of individual islands
9.0 Glossary of geological terms
1.0 Introduction
The islands are composed of rocks that were formed during 
four different time periods. The islands' shapes and most of their landforms 
were produced in the last few hundred thousand years.
2.0 Basement greywacke 
rocks, the Waipapa Terrane Group
The greywackes (Waipapa Terrane Group) are the oldest 
rocks in the Auckland region. In Auckland City their occurrence at the 
surface is limited to the islands. The largest area of greywacke in 
the region forms the high-standing Hunua Ranges, but there the visible 
exposures of these rocks are small (in streambeds), or weathered in 
coastal cliffs. The largest and freshest exposures of these greywacke 
rocks and their features are on the more exposed coasts of the islands.
These hard grey rocks accumulated on the sea floor as 
sand and mud off the coast of Gondwanaland during the dinosaur age (Triassic 
and Jurassic periods, 250-145 million years ago). At this time, the 
coast of Gondwanaland lay along a boundary between crustal plates. Here 
the leading edge of the ancient oceanic Pacific Plate was sliding under 
(subducting) the edge of the Gondwanaland Plate. As the oceanic plate 
descended it dragged down the sea floor, creating a deep, elongate ocean 
trench parallel to the coast.
 Pacific Plate oceanic crust - chert and pillow 
lava
The crust of the ancient Pacific Plate consisted of 
basalt pillow lava flows that had been extruded onto the ocean floor 
at the spreading ridge far out to the east. As the plate moved slowly 
westwards towards Gondwanaland, these flows became mantled by thin deposits 
of silica-rich mud (called ooze). The ooze was made up of the shells 
of dead microplankton that continually fell on the Pacific Ocean floor. 
The ooze eventually hardened into splintery red and green chert beds.
 Trench sediment
As the ancient Pacific Plate moved down into the deep 
trench, the pillow lavas and chert became buried by sand and mud derived 
by erosion of the adjacent Gondwanaland. As the sediment layers built 
up in the trench, they were deformed by continual movement of the subducting 
Pacific Plate. Layers became stacked and progressively tilted towards 
Gondwanaland. Younger sediment, and sometimes much older layers of chert 
and pillow lava, were scraped off the top of the Pacific Plate (as if 
by a giant bulldozer blade) and incorporated into the growing pile of 
sedimentary rocks. In this way a wedge of rocks formed and continued 
to thicken and extend seawards for as long as subduction and the supply 
of sediment lasted.
As the sedimentary pile thickened, the older layers 
were compressed and hardened into greywacke. The deeper the rocks were 
buried, the more they were subjected to high temperatures and pressures, 
which started to metamorphose them. Mineral-rich waters passing through 
the rocks at depth deposited quartz and zeolite minerals in fractures 
to form the characteristic white veinlets of our greywacke rocks. The 
greywackes are Auckland's oldest rocks - we cannot trace the region 
and the city's origins back any further in time.
Deposition in the trench finished at the end of the 
Jurassic about 145 million years ago, as the large thickness of sediment 
that had accumulated was crunched up by collision forces between the 
two plates. These forces intensely folded, fractured and faulted the 
rocks and started to push them up out of the seas to form a coastal 
chain of mountains.
Two slightly different associations of Waipapa Terrane 
greywacke occur in the region - a western association (Hunua facies) 
of volcanic-derived sandstone with thrust slices of chert and less common 
basalt pillow lava; and an eastern association (Morrinsville facies) 
of well-bedded, coarser-grained, massive sandstone and occasional granite-bearing 
conglomerate. The eastern association, which occurs on Great Barrier, 
is usually more coherent, less disrupted, better bedded and less metamorphosed 
than the western association, which forms many of the inner islands 
of the gulf.
Examples
Localities identified for their significant exposures 
of different aspects of these greywacke rocks on the islands are: 
  - Cherts and their deformation - Island 
Bay, Waiheke; Pohutukawa Point, Waiheke; Horuhoru (Gannet Rock); Administration 
Bay, Motutapu
 
  - Pillow lavas - Island Bay, Waiheke; Blackpool, 
Waiheke
 
  - Trench sediments and their deformation 
(western association) - Island Bay, Waiheke
 
  - Trench sediments and conglomerate (eastern 
association) - Harataonga, Great Barrier.
 
3.0 Regional subsidence 
- basal Waitemata Group 
Following deposition, induration and deformation of 
the greywacke rocks, a long period (100-30 million years ago) followed 
of which we have no record in the Auckland region as no rocks of this 
age are preserved. During this time (80-55 million years ago) the Tasman 
Sea opened up and New Zealand split off from Gondwanaland. It would 
appear that for most of this long period the Auckland-Northland region 
was land which gradually eroded down to a subdued flat-lying landscape 
by the Oligocene (30 million years ago).
Towards the end of this period, a new plate boundary 
began forming through New Zealand and the new collision forces resulted 
in a phase of rapid subsidence in the Auckland region, between 22 and 
20 million years ago (early Miocene). A detailed record of this period 
of subsidence has been captured and preserved in the fossil-bearing 
sedimentary rocks of the basal Waitemata Group, which is best exposed 
in the cliffs of the islands.
As the low-lying Auckland region subsided, the sea flooded 
the land forming islands out of the low greywacke hills and ridges. 
Gravels and shelly sands were deposited on the beaches and in shallow 
water around the rocky shore of these islands. These deposits contain 
the fossilised remains of numerous shellfish, lampshells, sea eggs and 
corals. Intertidal and shallow subtidal rocky shore fossils are not 
often preserved and several sections at the west end of Waiheke contain 
examples of several hundred different species - a number of which are 
known only from this area. As the region subsided the sediments that 
were deposited (and the fossils they contain) record a progressive deepening. 
First the islands were submerged and eventually depths of 1000-2000m 
were reached and the Waitemata sedimentary basin was fully formed.
Examples
Localities identified for their significant exposures 
of different aspects of these greywacke rocks on the islands are: 
  - Most complete sequences: Fossil Bay, Waiheke; 
Ocean Beach, Motuihe
 
  - Unique and rich fossils: Double U Bay, 
Waiheke; Oneroa, Waiheke
 
  - Limestone and coastal karst: Limestone 
Point, Motuihe
 
  - Deeper water barnacles and sea stacks: 
West coast of Motutapu.
 
4.0 Marine basin 
sediments - Waitemata flysch basin Group
The Waitemata sedimentary basin (which is unrelated 
to the modern Waitemata Harbour) was fully formed by 20 million years 
ago (early Miocene). It shallowed up to the north with the land beyond 
occupying most of the present-day Northland region. Erosion of this 
northern land produced sediment that was carried down rivers and streams 
to the coast, which lay in the vicinity of where Wellsford is today. 
Large quantities of sand and mud that accumulated along 
the coastal shelf periodically became unstable and flowed in a slurry 
into the basin. This sediment was funneled down submarine canyons and 
on reaching the gentler slopes of the basin floor, spread out to form 
undersea fans of sediment, rather like a delta at the mouth of a river. 
As the sediment flowed down into the basin, the larger clasts dropped 
out first, followed by progressively finer and finer grains. These turbulent 
slurries, called turbidity currents, deposited the 10cm-3m thick layers 
of sandstone called the Waitemata Sandstones. These layers grade upwards 
from coarse or medium sand at their base to fine sand or mud at the 
top. Between the sandstone layers there are usually 5-20cm thick layers 
of softer, grey mudstone. These mudstone layers accumulated very slowly 
on the sea floor as mud settled out of suspension from the seawater 
overhead. Each sandstone bed was deposited in only a matter of hours, 
whereas the thinner mudstone layers accumulated during the periods of 
hundreds of years between each successive sediment flow.
The western boundary of the Waitemata Basin was formed 
by the large and actively growing submarine Waitakere volcano. Occasional 
volcanic quakes loosened the sea floor high on the volcano's slopes, 
causing volcanic gravel and sand to slide eastwards down into the Waitemata 
Basin as undersea lahars. These deposited thick beds of darker-coloured 
volcanic sediment (called Parnell Grit) within the sequence of more 
normal Waitemata Sandstones. Thick Parnell Grit beds can be seen in 
the cliffs and shore platforms of Motutapu and Motuihe.
In many places the layering we see in the Waitemata 
Sandstone cliffs is flat lying or only gently tilted, but elsewhere 
the layers are broken, folded or crumpled. Much of the tight folding 
of layers seen within otherwise unfolded sequences was probably produced 
by sliding or slumping of the near-surface layers within a few thousand 
years of their deposition.
During the 3-5 million years of the Waitemata Basin's 
existence, up to 1km thickness of sand and mud accumulated on its floor. 
As the layers built up, they were compressed and hardened into the sandstone 
and mudstone we see today. The best examples of Waitemata Sandstone 
sequences are exposed in the sea cliffs along the east coast of the 
Auckland region, with several examples on the islands.
Examples
Localities identified for their significant exposures 
of different aspects of these Waitemata Group sedimentary rocks on the 
islands are:
  - West coast of Motutapu
 
  - Ocean Beach section, Motuihe.
 
5.0 Miocene to 
pleistocene volcanism - includes Coromandel Volcanic Arc Group
The Auckland region was subjected to further tectonic 
compression and the Waitemata Basin and sediments that were deposited 
in it were pushed up out of the sea to form land from about 18 million 
years ago. As the rock was pushed up above the sea to form land, water 
erosion and chemical weathering began eating away at and slowly eroding 
it. Over the last 18 million years the eastern part of the region has 
been uplifted further than the west, allowing deeper erosion in the 
east in the vicinity of the islands which has exposed the older greywacke 
rocks that further west underlie the Auckland isthmus at depth. 
From about 18-4 million years ago, dry land extended 
right across from the Auckland isthmus to the Coromandel Peninsula and 
Great Barrier. During most of this time a volcanic arc of large andesitic 
stratovolcanoes and rhyolitic caldera volcanoes erupted periodically 
along the line of present day Great Barrier and the Coromandel Peninsula. 
Andesitic stratovolcanoes have a central steep-sided cone composed of 
lava flows and breccias which is surrounded by a gently sloping ring 
plain composed of laharic volcanic breccia deposits, like Mount Taranaki 
or Mount Ruapehu today. The ring plain of some of these stratovolcanoes 
that form Coromandel Peninsula extended a long way west, with small 
eroded remnants of a 16-14 million year old volcano still preserved 
in two small outcrops on the eastern end of Waiheke.
On northern Great Barrier the deeply eroded plumbing 
of one of the oldest (18-16 million years old) Coromandel Volcanic Arc 
stratovolcanoes can be seen as dikes of andesite and dacite intruding 
greywacke. Most of the southern two-thirds of Great Barrier are also 
underlain by the eroded flows, breccias, lahar deposits and shallow 
plumbing of further, slightly younger (14-10 million years old) andesite 
stratovolcanoes. Rare freshwater lake sediment occurs within the stratovolcano 
sequence in the south.
Later in the Miocene, 10-8 million years ago, rhyolitic 
volcanism broke out in a number of places at the northern end of the 
Coromandel Volcanic Arc. Caldera-forming (collapse crater) volcanoes 
erupted ignimbrite and rhyolitic domes in the Hirakimata (Mount Hobson) 
area of central Great Barrier and at Rakitu. Te Ahumata plateau on southern 
Great Barrier is formed of a thick ignimbrite deposit, probably the 
remnant of a formerly much more extensive sheet erupted from Hirakimata 
caldera. Large rhyolitic eruptions also occurred to the north of Great 
Barrier during this same period. Eroded rhyolite domes and ignimbrite 
form the Mokohinau islands and seafloor outcrops over a wide area. A 
small quantity of basalt occurs with the rhyolites at Rakitu and the 
Mokohinau islands, and its ascent from the mantle may have been the 
catalyst that generated the rhyolitic eruptions. 
Slightly later in the Miocene, 8-7 million years ago, 
a basaltic andesite volcano with extensive lava flows erupted near the 
east end of Waiheke. Boulder fields of this rock at Stony Batter are 
the eroded remnants that provide the only evidence for this volcano's 
former existence. Other volcanoes of similar age also erupted near Cape 
Rodney to the north.
Around 5-3 million years ago, the Hauraki Gulf and Firth 
of Thames areas were forced upwards, tilting the Coromandel Peninsula 
to the east and much of the Auckland Region to the west. Following this 
up-doming, the elongate central strip subsided dramatically about 3-2 
million years ago to form the gulf, the firth and the Hauraki Plains 
to the south. About this time (3-1.5 million years ago), another stratovolcano 
was produced by eruptions of dacite in the centre of the gulf, forming 
Little Barrier volcano. Despite erosion, the volcano still retains some 
of its original shape with a steep-sided central cone surrounded by 
gently sloping ring plain remnants.
Examples
Localities identified for their significant exposures 
of different aspects of these Miocene to Pleistocene volcanoes on the 
islands are:
  - Fort Hill, Waiheke
 
  - Stony Batter, Waiheke.
 
6.0 The ice ages 
and the shape of the islands
The world has experienced alternating periods of cold 
and warm climate during the ice ages of the last few million years. 
There have been at least 30 of these cold-warm cycles in the last 2 
million years. Each cycle lasted 40,000-100,000 years and included a 
warm period similar to today and a cold or glacial period when large 
ice caps formed on southern and northern hemisphere continents. These 
ice caps froze large amounts of the earth's water on land and resulted 
in major worldwide drops in sea level of 130-50m during each ice age 
period. Sea level has only been up around its present level during the 
peaks of the warmer periods, for about 10 per cent of the time in the 
last 2 million years. It has probably never risen more than about 6-10m 
higher than what it is today.
During the coldest part of the last ice age, just 20,000 
years ago, sea level fell to 130m lower than present. Although other 
parts of New Zealand were glacier and ice cap covered, the Auckland 
Region was still covered in forest. Today's harbours and the Hauraki 
Gulf were forested valleys, with streams flowing seawards across broad 
coastal plains. In Auckland a small river flowed down the forested Waitemata 
valley and straight out past Motutapu hills beneath what is now Rangitoto. 
From there it still had 120km to flow to reach the coast out beyond 
Great Barrier and the Mokohinau islands. All of the islands were hills 
and ridges joined together by lower lying valleys and plains. Waiheke 
and Ponui were separated from the Coromandel Ranges by an extension 
of the flat land of the Hauraki Plains. Great Barrier and the Mokohinau 
islands were joined together and linked to mainland North Island.
Following the peak of the last ice age, the world's 
climate began to warm, the ice caps slowly melted, and the world's sea 
level rose correspondingly. Sea level reached its present level about 
7000 years ago, although a slightly warmer period 6000-3000 years ago, 
resulted in a temporary rise of 1-2m above what it is now. Some low-lying 
coastal terraces were formed intertidally at this time (for example, 
the flats of Motukorea, carpark flats at Matiatia, Waiheke).
The cycles of wildly fluctuating sea levels had a major 
impact on the shape of the islands and their coasts. During each ice 
age, erosion on land increased because of colder weather and lowered 
base level for the streams. Sediment poured down the rivers (especially 
the ancestral Waikato River flowing down through the Hauraki Plains) 
and was spread along the coasts by longshore drift. The valleys on and 
between the islands' hills were progressively eroded down to levels 
well below present sea level. At the end of the last ice age the rising 
sea encroached on the land and the sand that had built up along the 
coast was swept shoreward. For several thousand years after the sea 
reached its present level, vast quantities of sand were thrown up against 
the land to form beaches, terraces and dune barriers. 
Inside the Hauraki Gulf, where sand supply was not so 
great, the river and stream valleys were drowned to become the modern 
embayed coastlines and islands. Outside the Hauraki Gulf, on the east 
side of Great Barrier, there was a greater supply of white quartz sand 
which was thrown up on the beaches and formed sand dune barriers across 
the mouth of several valleys forming Whangapoua Harbour and Kaitoke 
Swamp. Cobbles eroding from the laharic breccias forming the cliffs 
of Little Barrier have been transported by storm waves down both sides 
of the island and formed the extensive cuspate boulder flat of Te Titoki 
Point on the leeward southwest corner of the island.
Most of the cliffs around the islands are very young 
and have eroded out of the sloping hillsides in just the last 7000 years. 
The intertidal reefs in front of the cliffs are an indication of the 
amount of cliff retreat since sea level rose. Some of the higher cliffs 
in harder greywacke or andesite rocks, such as those on the northern 
coasts of Waiheke and Little Barrier and eastern coast of Great Barrier, 
would have been carved back during each successive period of higher 
sea level. These would have become weathering inland bluffs and forested 
scree slopes during the intervening intervals between the ice ages.
Today the youthful coasts of the islands are still changing. 
They erode in some places and grow in others as nature continues to 
respond to the post-ice age rise in sea level, the present pulse of 
sea level rise, and to the variable patterns of winds, waves and currents.
Examples
Localities identified for their significant examples 
of young coastal and terrestrial landforms on the islands are:
  - Motukaha tombolo, Waiheke; Te Matuku Spit, 
Waiheke; Stony Batter, Waiheke
 
  - Te Titoki Point cuspate foreland, and 
Pohutukawa Flat rock fall, both Little Barrier
 
  - Man o' War Passage, Kaitoke Swamp, and 
Whangapoua Harbour, all Great Barrier.
 
7.0 Young volcanoes 
- Auckland Volcanic Field Group and Auckland lava caves Group
Much of Auckland city is built over the products and 
landforms of the young Auckland Volcanic Field in which basalt was erupted 
from about 50 volcanoes over the last 300,000 years. Three styles of 
eruption produced the small basalt volcanoes of the Auckland Volcanic 
Field. While some volcanoes were formed by only one style of eruption, 
many were formed by a combination of all three. The style of eruption 
at any particular time depended upon how much gas was dissolved in the 
magma, the rate of magma upwelling, and whether it came in contact with 
water.
Most Auckland volcanoes started life with a series of 
explosive eruptions. These occurred when rising magma encountered ground 
or surface water, which produced superheated steam. Gas dissolved in 
the magma was released explosively with the steam and a mushroom-shaped 
cloud of ash and shattered rock from the volcano's throat was thrown 
hundreds of metres into the air. A shallow explosion crater up to 2km 
across and 100m deep was formed and debris from the collapsing cloud 
built up a low, circular rim of bedded ash and debris, known as a tuff 
ring.
Lava-fountaining eruptions occurred when gas-rich magma 
reached the surface without coming into contact with water. The gas 
was released quickly, creating frothy lava that was sprayed from the 
vent as a near-continuous stream of brightly glowing fragments. As they 
flew through the air, the fragments cooled to form red-brown or black 
scoria, which accumulated around the vent and built up a steep-sided 
scoria cone, often with a deep central crater.
Lava flows developed when degassed magma rose in the 
vent and burst out from the base of the cone or breached the explosion 
crater rim. Rivers of lava initially flowed off down existing valleys, 
but if the outpouring continued a sequence of overlapping flows was 
sometimes erupted. This built up a cone called a shield volcano that 
gently sloped away in all directions. When the lava flows cooled they 
solidified into a hard, dark, fine-grained rock, called basalt. This 
has been used extensively in Auckland for kerbstones and many older 
buildings, including a number made of basalt from Rangitoto (for example, 
the Melanesian Mission House, Mission Bay; and Kinder House, Parnell).
Two of the youngest volcanoes in the Auckland field 
formed Rangitoto and Motukorea (Browns Island) in the Hauraki Gulf. 
Motukorea is thought to have erupted between 15,000 and 10,000 years 
ago, when sea level was considerably lower than now and the Waitemata 
Harbour was still a forested valley system. Motukorea initially erupted 
explosively forming a shallow explosion crater and surrounding tuff 
ring. Parts of the tuff ring form the ridge, cliffs and reefs on the 
north-east side of the island. Lava-fountaining built a scoria cone 
in the middle of the explosion crater. Portions of some of the early-formed 
scoria cone were rafted off by lava flow and form small hills around 
the main cone. Degassed lava poured out from around the base of the 
western and southern sides of the scoria cone, breached and overtopped 
the tuff ring and flowed up to 2km west and south to form an extensive 
lava flow field. Most of this field is now drowned beneath the harbour, 
but the flat southern and western parts of Motukorea and the surrounding 
reefs are the upper parts of the lava flow field.
Rangitoto is the youngest and by far the largest volcano 
in the Auckland volcanic field. It erupted just 600 years ago and the 
finding of footprints in wet ash on nearby Motutapu indicates that its 
eruption was witnessed by local Maori. Rangitoto erupted in the middle 
of the main channel into the Waitemata Harbour and its initial eruptions 
appear to have been highly explosive with large volumes of ash being 
deposited over the northern half of Motutapu. Once sufficient of the 
volcano had built up above sea level the dominant styles of eruption 
switched to fire-fountaining over the central vent area and the outpouring 
of enormous volumes of relatively hot, fluid basalt lava flows. The 
fire-fountaining built up a series of scoria cones in the centre of 
the growing island with remnants of two earlier cones forming distinctive 
bumps on either side of the last formed steep-sided cone with its deep 
crater. The lava flows poured out in all directions from around the 
flanks of the scoria cones and built up a gently sloping, circular shield 
volcano of many overlapping flows. Soon after the last flows had been 
erupted some of the still fluid magma withdrew down the vent causing 
the scoria cones to subside and creating a shallow moat around them. 
Some of the thicker feeder flows high on Rangitoto formed thick crusts 
around them while the lava flowing inside was still molten. Later the 
fluid lava flowed out of the internal tubes leaving behind lava caves, 
which are mostly accessed through sections of collapsed roof. 
Examples
Localities identified for their significant examples 
of the volcanic landforms and structures of the Auckland Volcanic Field 
on the islands are:
  - Motukorea
 
  - Rangitoto; lava caves, hornito, lava flow 
crust, flow levees and flow lobes, all on Rangitoto.
 
8.0 Geology of 
individual islands 
8.1 Pakatoa, Ponui 
and Rotoroa 
These three islands are composed entirely of Mesozoic 
Waipapa Terrane greywacke rocks. Because their east coasts are exposed 
to rough seas from the Hauraki Gulf, they are more eroded on this side 
and have some of the freshest exposures of these rocks in the gulf. 
Several of the eastern sections on these islands provide excellent exposures 
of the complex deformed structure and sedimentary features of the western 
association.
8.2 Waiheke 
Waiheke is mainly composed of greywacke rocks of the 
western association of the Waipapa Terrane. Hard beds of red chert occur 
in a number of places and because of their resistance to erosion they 
often form the more prominent coastal points and high-standing ridges 
on the island. Basal Waitemata Group sedimentary sequences outcrop along 
the coast in several places at the west end of the island and provide 
an excellent record of the initiation of the region's subsidence about 
22 million years ago. High on the ridges of the east end of Waiheke 
are the greatly eroded remnants of two periods of Miocene volcanism 
- 16-14 million year old andesitic breccia transported here as lahars 
from the Coromandel volcanoes, and 8-7 million year old andesitic basalt 
lava flows from a small shield volcano that now form the distinctive 
boulders of Stony Batter.
8.3 Motutapu, 
Rakino and the Noises
These islands are predominantly made of greywacke rocks 
of the Waipapa Terrane's western association, with a mix of hardened 
sandstone, chert and pillow lava basalt. Small sections of basal Waitemata 
Group conglomerate and siltstone outcrop in the cliffs on the west side 
of Motutapu and east side of Rakino. On Motutapu the basal sequence 
passes up into the deeper water Waitemata Sandstones that accumulated 
in the early Miocene Waitemata sedimentary basin. Several beds of submarine 
lahar deposits (Parnell Grit) are present within the Waitemata Sandstone 
sequence. Volcanic ash from Rangitoto thickly drapes the surface of 
Motutapu, especially over its northern half.
8.4 Motuihe 
The tops of several ancient early Miocene sea stacks 
and a somewhat larger island made of Waipapa Terrane greywacke occur 
in the southern half of Motuihe. These are overlain by thin sequences 
of basal Waitemata Group conglomerate and sandy limestone that accumulated 
in shallow water as the region was subsiding around 22 million years 
ago, but most of the island is composed of sediment that accumulated 
in the Waitemata sedimentary basin following subsidence. This is interbedded 
sandstone and mudstone (Waitemata Sandstones) and one 20m thick submarine 
volcanic lahar deposit (Parnell Grit) which outcrops in the cliffs around 
much of the island. 
8.5 Motukorea
Motukorea is one of the youngest and least modified 
of Auckland's young basalt volcanoes. The northwest cliffs are eroded 
into the remnant northwest arc of its tuff ring, which had been produced 
by early explosive eruptions of ash. The high central hill is a scoria 
cone with a deep crater. Surrounding low knolls of scoria are portions 
of cone that had been rafted away by lava flows. The southern and western 
sides of the island are underlain by lava flows, which extend well out 
beneath the waves. The extensive 1-2m high flat that forms the southern 
and western sides of the island is a high tidal terrace that was built 
up in the lee of the island during the Holocene high sea-level stand, 
6000-4000 years ago. 
8.6 Rangitoto
Rangitoto is the youngest (600 years old) and by far 
the largest of the volcanoes in the young Auckland basalt volcanic field. 
It erupted in the middle of the Waitemata Harbour's main channel, initially 
with voluminous ash eruptions, some of which mantled nearby Motutapu. 
These explosive ash eruptions were followed by fire fountaining which 
built up a series of scoria cones around the main central vents and 
form the steeper knobs of the island's summit. Around the base of these 
growing scoria cones, enormous quantities of basalt lava flowed out 
in all directions forming a gently dipping, circular shield volcano, 
which now forms the bulk of the island. Many of these flows were slow 
moving aa types with cooled carapaces of angular blocks, but when they 
reached the sea they often developed branching, finger-like tubes when 
the hot lava came in contact with cold water. Many of the flows, especially 
those higher on the island, developed a thick crust of cooled solid 
basalt with molten lava still flowing inside. Sometimes the lava flowed 
out from inside the flows, leaving empty elongate lava tubes or caves.
8.7 Little Barrier 
(Hauturu)
Little Barrier is the eroded remains of two dacite volcanoes. 
Remnants of the older 3 million year old dacite dome only occur near 
sea level in the northeast corner, with less eroded remnants of a younger 
1.5 million year old dacite stratovolcano forming the bulk of the island. 
The distant profile of Little Barrier preserves the original shape of 
this stratovolcano with a steep-sided central cone and surrounding gently 
dipping laharic ring plain.
8.8 The Mokohinau 
islands
The Mokohinau islands have an entirely volcanic origin, 
being the eroded remains of late Miocene rhyolitic volcanism at the 
northern end of the Coromandel volcanic arc. Also present is evidence 
of minor associated andesitic and basaltic volcanism. Burgess and the 
associated northern islands in the group are composed predominantly 
of ignimbrite and rhyolite lava, whereas the southern island Fanal is 
entirely formed by a rhyolite dome.
8.9 Great Barrier 
(Aotea)
Eastern association greywacke rocks underlie all of 
Great Barrier and appear above sea level to form the high northern part 
of the island, north of Katherine Bay and also along a small area of 
coast in the east around Harataonga. The largest part of the island, 
in the centre and south, is composed of the eroded remnants of mid Miocene 
andesitic stratovolcanoes and their laharic ring plain deposits. In 
the north, the subvolcanic plumbing from beneath a slightly older stratovolcano 
has been exposed by erosion to reveal numerous andesite and dacite dikes 
cutting through the underlying greywacke. The high central Hirakimata 
(Mount Hobson) part of Great Barrier is composed of the erupted products 
of a late Miocene rhyolitic caldera volcano. Ignimbrite is widespread. 
The high, flat-topped Te Ahumata plateau of southern Great Barrier is 
composed of the eroded remnants of a formerly far more extensive sheet 
of ignimbrite that may have been erupted from the Hirakimata caldera 
volcano. The eroded columns and flow-banded rhyolite of several steep-sided 
domes form high pinnacles and ridges around Hirakimata.
The shape of Great Barrier today is a result of a long 
period of erosion of the andesite and rhyolite volcanoes by streams 
and waves. When sea level rose after the end of the last ice age the 
lower reaches of the stream valleys were flooded by the sea and became 
bays and inlets. Those on the western side remain today as Port Fitzroy, 
Whangaparapara and Blind Bay. On the eastern side an abundant supply 
of quartz sand was thrown up as sand dune barriers across the entrance 
to the bays creating Whangapoua Harbour and Kaitoke Swamp.
8.10 Rakitu 
Rakitu is the eroded remains of a small rhyolitic caldera 
volcano that erupted in the late Miocene. Welded and non-welded ignimbrite 
is the predominant rock type with older, rather altered rhyolite lava 
outcropping on the north coast and fresh intrusive rhyolite forming 
the high southwest corner. A small outcrop of dark basalt lava occurs 
within the rhyolite sequence of Black and White Rock, off the west side 
of the island. 
9.0 Glossary of 
geological terms
| Term | 
Meaning | 
| aa flow | 
viscous lava flow with sharp rubbly 
outer surface | 
| andesite | 
grey volcanic rock formed by cooling 
lava with an intermediate silica content (52-65 per cent) | 
| argillite | 
hardened mudstone | 
| basalt | 
dark volcanic rock formed by cooling 
lava with a low silica content (45-52 per cent) | 
| bathyal | 
water depths of 200-2000m | 
| beach rock | 
beach rocks, shells and sand cemented 
together | 
| bomb impact sags | 
depression made by a volcanic 
bomb landing | 
| boudin | 
layer of sandstone pulled apart 
to form 'a string of sausages' | 
| boxwork weathering | 
rectangular pattern of hard rusty 
ribs (of limonite) produced by weathering of jointed greywacke 
 | 
| breccia | 
rock composed of angular gravel-sized 
fragments of rock | 
| broken formation | 
beds broken-up by deformation | 
| chenier | 
long, narrow beach ridge of shell 
or sand built out across intertidal flats 
 | 
| chert | 
extremely hard siliceous rock | 
| clast | 
fragment of pre-existing rock | 
| conglomerate | 
sedimentary rock composed of rounded 
pebbles, cobbles or boulders | 
| dacite | 
light grey volcanic rock formed 
by cooling lava with a high silica content (>65 per cent) | 
| dike | 
a sheet-like body of igneous rock 
that cooled and solidified after being intruded in molten state, and 
cross-cutting an existing rock | 
| eastern association | 
the eastern association (or Morrinsville 
facies) of Waipapa Terrane greywacke | 
| exposure | 
place where weathered rock and 
soil has been removed to expose rock beneath | 
| flaggy | 
rock with a natural tendency to 
split into flat oblong slabs | 
| fluting | 
grooves dissolved on surface of 
rock by water | 
| foraminifera | 
microscopic shell-bearing marine 
amoeba-like organisms | 
| geology | 
study of rocks | 
| geomorphology | 
study of landforms | 
| Gondwanaland | 
ancient southern supercontinent | 
| greywacke | 
hard compacted sedimentary rocks 
forming the basement rock of the Auckland Region | 
| hornito | 
small spatter cone formed on top 
of lava flow | 
| ignimbrite | 
volcanic rock formed by deposition 
and partial welding of a high temperature, high velocity flow of fragmented 
magma | 
| intra-plate volcanism | 
volcanism erupting through a tectonic 
plate | 
| joint | 
a fracture in rock | 
| karst | 
distinctive landforms produced 
by solution of limestone rock by rainwater | 
| keystone fault | 
x-shaped double fault | 
| laharic breccia | 
deposit of angular boulders and 
cobbles left behind by a passing volcanic mudflow (called a lahar) | 
| landform | 
form of the surface of the land | 
| lava cave/tube | 
an elongate hollow left behind 
inside the solidified outer crust of a lava flow when the molten lava 
 inside flowed out | 
| levee | 
elongate ridge of rocks or sediment 
deposited on either side of a river or lava flow | 
| limestone | 
a sedimentary rock comprising 
more than 50 per cent calcium carbonate (lime, shell) | 
| limonite | 
rust-coloured iron oxide mineral 
formed during the weathering of iron-rich rocks | 
| lozenge | 
rhomb-shaped pieces of rock 
 | 
| macrofossil | 
fossils that can be easily seen 
without magnification | 
| Mesozoic | 
age of reptiles, between 235 and 
65 million years ago | 
| microfossil | 
fossils that cannot be seen without 
magnification | 
| Miocene | 
period of time between 23 and 
5 million years ago | 
| mollusc | 
shellfish and snails | 
| mudstone | 
sedimentary rock made of mud | 
| normal fault | 
fault in which overhanging rocks 
moved downwards | 
| octocoral | 
group of deepwater tree corals | 
| ostracods | 
tiny crustaceans sometimes known 
as water fleas or seed shrimps | 
| pahoehoe flow | 
fluid lava flow with wrinkled 
outer skin | 
| paleontology | 
the study of fossils | 
| Parnell Grit | 
thick beds of volcanic pebbles, 
grit and sand deposited on the floor of the Waitemata Basin by submarine 
lahars | 
| pillow lava | 
elongate, pillow-like fingers 
of lava formed when lava flows under water, often seawater | 
| rhyolite | 
light grey, pink or white volcanic 
rock formed by cooling lava with a high silica content (>65 per cent) | 
| rock | 
any mass of mineral matter, whether 
consolidated or not, which forms part of the Earth's crust | 
| sandstone | 
sedimentary rock made of sand 
grains | 
| scoria | 
red or black vesicular material 
erupted from a volcano | 
| scoria cone | 
steep-sided volcanic cone composed 
of scoria, produced by fire-fountaining eruptions | 
| shell spit | 
narrow spit of shells built-up 
on or near the shoreline | 
| shield volcano | 
gently-sloping volcanic cone composed 
of numerous overlapping, fluid lava flows | 
| stack | 
small rocky islet | 
| stratotype | 
a section of sedimentary rock 
deposited during a period of geological time and used to define that 
period of time | 
| stratovolcano | 
steep-sided volcanic cone made 
of andesite lava flows and breccia | 
| subtidal | 
shallow marine depths below low 
tide | 
| surge deposit | 
volcanic ash bed left behind by 
a sideways explosive surge of hot, often wet, gas-rich ash | 
| tension gash | 
gash-like split in rock caused 
by pull-apart tension | 
| thrust | 
low angle fault | 
| tombolo | 
a spit of sand, shell or rocks 
linking an island to the mainland | 
| top hat island | 
a small island with the shape 
of a top hat when the tide is out, formed by a central remnant islet 
surrounded by a wide shore platform | 
| tsunami | 
tidal wave generated during an 
earthquake | 
| tuff | 
rock made of hardened ash | 
| tuff ring | 
a raised circular ring of bedded 
ash built up around a volcanic explosion crater | 
| type locality | 
the rock locality where the type 
specimen of a fossil species, mineral or rock was first found and named | 
| type section | 
the section of rock exposure designated 
as the most typical when a formation is named and described | 
| vein | 
a sheet-like body of minerals 
crystallized in a joint or fissure | 
| volcanic bomb | 
a solid block thrown out by an 
erupting volcano | 
| Waipapa Terrane | 
group name for greywacke rocks 
of east Auckland | 
| Waitakere Volcano | 
giant volcano that erupted off 
the west coast of the Waitakere Ranges between 22 and 15 million years 
ago forming a volcanic island that has since been eroded away, except 
for its eastern slopes which now form the Waitakere Ranges | 
| Waitemata Basin | 
deep submarine depression that 
lay off Auckland 20 million years ago, on the floor of which the Waitemata 
Sandstones accumulated | 
| Waitemata Sandstone | 
interbedded sandstones and mudstones 
that accumulated on the floor of the deep Waitemata Basin | 
| Waitemata Group | 
group name for sedimentary rocks 
that accumulated in the Waitemata Basin, as it was forming and after 
it became deeply submerged | 
| water expulsion structure | 
swirly shape of bedding disrupted 
by the outflow of water from the sediment beneath | 
| weathering | 
the processes that break down 
rocks to clay and sediment | 
| western association | 
the western association (or Hunua 
facies) of Waipapa Terrane greywacke |