CHATHAM ISLANDS


The archipelago of the 'Chatham Islands' ('Rekohu' in the Moriori language and 'Wharekauri' in the Māori language), consists of about 10 islands within a 40-km radius. The islands have officially belonged to New Zealand since 1842.

Contents
Geography
Ecology and biodiversity
History
Origin claims
Population
Transportation
Government
Electorates
Local Government
State Services
Health
Education
In fiction
References
External links

Geography


:''See also: Chatham Rise''
The islands as a grouping are located at about , roughly 800 km east of Christchurch, New Zealand. They cover a total of 966 km², almost all of which is in the two main islands, Chatham Island and Pitt Island.
The two main islands are the only inhabited islands, with the smaller islands mostly conservation reserves with access restricted or prohibited.
Names of the main islands are (in English, Māori and Moriori):

Chatham Island/Wharekauri/Rekohu

Pitt Island/Rangiauria

Little Mangere Island

Star Keys/Motuhope - a group of five islets with Round Islet being the largest — located 12 km east of Pitt Island

Forty-Fours (or Forty Fours)/Motuhara - located some 50 km east of Chatham Island

Mangere Island (1.13 km²) - lying off Pitt Island

South East Island/Rangatira (2.18 km²) - located 2 km southeast of Pitt Island

The Sisters/Rangitatahi - located around 16 km north of Cape Pattison (Cape Pattison is a headland in the northwestern part of Chatham Island)
The position of the Chatham Islands relative to New Zealand, and other outlying islands.

Some of these islands, once cleared for farming, are now preserved as nature reserves to conserve some of the flora and fauna that are unique to the Chatham Islands.
The international date line lies to the east of the Chathams, even though the islands lie east of 180° longitude. Consequently, the Chatham Islands observe their own time, 45 minutes ahead of New Zealand time, including during periods of daylight saving. (New Zealand Time orients itself to 180° longitude.) Chatham Island is an antipode point of the French department of Hérault (Languedoc-Rousillon).
Ecology and biodiversity

Most of the land is fern or pasture covered, although there are some areas of forest. Of interest are the macrocarpa trees, with branches trailing almost horizontally in the lee of the wind. The islands are hilly – Pitt more so than Chatham – although the highest point (299 m) is located on a plateau near the southernmost point of the main island. The main island of the chain is dotted with numerous lakes and lagoons, notably the large Te Whanga Lagoon. Other lakes on Chatham include Huro and Rangitahi. The main island has streams including Te Awainanga and Tuku.
The island is home to a number of endemic birds. The most famous species of the islands are the Magenta Petrel and the Black Robin, both of which came periously close to extinction before being saved through conservation efforts. Other endemic species are the Chatham Island Oystercatcher, the Chatham Gerygone, the Parea or Chatham Islands Pigeon, Forbes' Parakeet, the Chatham Islands Snipe and the Shore Plover. Several species have also gone extinct, including the Chatham Islands Raven and the Chatham Islands Fernbird.

History


The first human habitation of the Chathams involved migrating Polynesian tribes who settled the islands about 1500 CE,[1] and in their isolation became the Moriori people. The exact origins of these people remains a matter of some dispute. The Moriori population of the islands numbered about 2000. Their agricultural resources were not suited for the colder Chathams, so they lived as hunter-gatherers, taking food from the sea and from native flora.
They also lost the art of seafaring. This constrained society lived peacefully, resolving disputes through consensus or singular combat rather than warfare.
The name "Chatham Islands" comes from the ship HMS ''Chatham'', whose captain William R. Broughton landed on November 29, 1791, claimed possession for Great Britain and named the islands after the political head of the Royal Navy (coincidentally also named Chatham). Sealers and whalers soon started hunting in the surrounding ocean with the islands as their base. It is estimated that 10 to 20 percent of the indigenous population soon died from diseases introduced by foreigners. The sealing and whaling industries ceased activities about 1861, while fishing remained as a major economic activity.
On November 19, 1835, a British ship carrying 500 Māori armed with guns, clubs and axes arrived, followed by another ship on December 5, 1835 with a further 400 Māori. They proceeded to massacre the Moriori and enslave the survivors. A Moriori survivor recalled: "[The Māori] commenced to kill us like sheep.... [We] were terrified, fled to the bush, concealed ourselves in holes underground, and in any place to escape our enemies. It was of no avail; we were discovered and killed - men, women and children indiscriminately". A Māori conqueror justified their actions as follows: "We took possession... in accordance with our customs and we caught all the people. Not one escaped....."[2]
The invading Māori and European whalers inter-married with the remaining indigenous population. Today, some island families still continue a Moriori lineage, and the Moriori culture has slowly recovered. Moriori have recently established a national marae and united under the Hokotehi Trust.
An all-male group of German Lutheran missionaries arrived in 1843. When a group of women were sent out to join them three years later, several marriages ensued, and many members of the present-day population can trace their ancestry back to the missionary families.
Origin claims

The origin of the indigenous population has political significance; if they are descended from the 1845 Māori invaders, or from earlier Māori from mainland New Zealand, then they have a claim to the ancestral Māori fishing rights which would be recognized by New Zealand.
It had been thought since the 1800s that the original Moriori arrived directly from more northerly Polynesian islands, which would make the Moriori's fishing rights claim invalid.
However, current research indicates that ancestral Moriori were Māori who came to the Chatham Islands from New Zealand about 1500.[3][4][5][6]
As Kerry Howe puts it,
Scholarship over the past 40 years has radically revised the model offered a century earlier by Smith: the Moriori as a pre-Polynesian people have gone (the term Moriori is now a technical term referring to those ancestral Maori who settled the Chatham Islands).'[7]

Modern inhabitants, descendants of those who invaded and conquered the archipelago in 1835, claim access to ancestral Māori fishing rights. An extensive report on these claims, "Rekohu", has been published by the
Waitangi Tribunal.[1]

Population


Chatham Islands Flag (unofficial, but is widely used on the Islands)

Chatham and Pitt Islands are inhabited. The population of 717 (Census 2001) individuals have European (70%), Māori and Moriori origins. The town of Waitangi is the main settlement with some 200 residents. Other villages are at Te One and Kaingaroa (where two primary schools are located. A third school can be found on Pitt Island). There are also the fishing villages of Owenga and Port Hutt.
Waitangi facilities include a hospital with resident doctor, trading bank, several stores, and engineering and marine services. The main shipping wharf is located here.

Transportation


Visitors to the Chathams usually arrive by air from Christchurch, Auckland or Wellington (around 1.5 - 2 hours from Christchurch on a Convair 580). While freight generally arrives by ship (4 - 5 days' sailing time), the sea journey takes too long for many passengers, and is not always available.
Although the Chathams are part of New Zealand, and there are no border controls or formalities on arrival, visitors are required to have prearranged their accommodation on the islands before arriving. Transport operators may refuse to carry passengers without accommodation bookings. Also, there are no scheduled public transport services on the island but accommodation providers are normally able to arrange transport as well.
For many years a Bristol Freighter served the islands, a slow and noisy freight aircraft converted for carrying passengers by installing a passenger container equipped with airline seats and a toilet in part of the cargo hold. The air service primarily served to ship out high-value export crayfish products.
The grass landing-field at Hapupu, at the northern end of the Island, proved a limiting factor, as few aircraft apart from the Bristol Freighter had both the range to fly to the islands and the ruggedness to land on the grass airstrip. Although other aircraft did use the landing field occasionally, they would often require repairs to fix damage resulting from the rough landing.
In 1991, after many years of requests by locals and the imminent demise of the aging Bristol Freighter aircraft, the construction of a sealed runway at Karewa, Tuuta Airport, allowed more modern aircraft to land safely. The Chathams' own airline, Air Chathams, now operates services to Auckland on Thursdays, Wellington on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays and Christchurch on Tuesdays. The timetable varies seasonally, but generally planes depart the Chathams around 10.30 am (Chathams Time) and arrive in the mainland around noon. Then they refuel and reload, depart again at around 1 pm, back to the Chathams. Air Chathams operates twin turboprop Convair 580 aircraft in combi (freight and passenger) configurations and Fairchild Metroliners.
Reef Shipping operates shipping services from Auckland and Napier, and Black Robin Freighters operates shipping services from Timaru and Napier.
Visitors to the islands should pre-arrange their accommodation before arrival with The Ultimate Hideaway, Chatham Lodge, Waitangi Hotel, Chathams Motel, or local homestays. The islands have rental vehicles, but no taxis or public transport.
There is a small section of tar sealed road between Waitangi and Te One but the majority of the island's roads are gravel.

Government


Electorates

In Parliament, until the 1980s the Chathams constituted part of the Lyttelton electorate, but since that time they have formed part of the Rongotai general electorate, which mostly lies in Wellington. Annette King serves as the Member for Rongotai. The Te Tai Tonga Māori seat (held in 2004 by Mahara Okeroa) also includes the Chatham Islands. The term of all current Parliamentarians expires at the next General Election.
Local Government

Local government on the islands, uniquely within New Zealand, involves a council established by its own Act of Parliament, the (''Chatham Islands Council Act 1995''). The Chatham Islands Council operates as a district council with regional council functions, making it in effect a unitary authority but with not quite as many responsibilities as the others.
State Services

Policing is carried out by a sole-charge constable appointed by the Wellington police district, who at various times has often doubled as an official for many government departments, including court registrar (Department for Courts), customs officer (New Zealand Customs Service) and immigration officer (Department of Labour - New Zealand Immigration Service).
A District Court judge sent from either the North Island or the South Island presides over court sittings, but urgent sittings may take place at the Wellington District Court.
Because of the isolation and small population, some of the rules governing daily activities undergo a certain relaxation on some of New Zealand's smaller islands. For example, every transport service operated solely on Great Barrier Island, the Chatham Islands or Stewart Island need not comply with section 70C of the Transport Act 1962 (the requirements for drivers to maintain driving-hours logbooks). Drivers subject to section 70B must nevertheless keep record of their driving hours in some form. See ''New Zealand Gazette'' 14 August 2003.
For the Chatham Islands' numismatic history see the following;

History of Chatham Islands numismatics
Health

The partially-elected Hawke's Bay District Health Board provides the islands with health services.
Education

There are three schools on the Chatham Islands, at Kaingaroa, Te One and Pitt Island. Pitt Island and Kaingaroa are staffed by sole charge principals while Te One has three teachers and a principal.These schools cater for children from Year 1 to 8. There is no secondary school on the Chathams. The majority of secondary school aged students leave the island for boarding schools in New Zealand. A small number remain on the island and carry out their secondary education through correspondence.

In fiction


In Jules Verne's ''Robur the Conqueror'', Robur anchors his flying vessel ''Albatross'' over the islands after the horizontal propellers are damaged in a storm.
David Mitchell's novel ''Cloud Atlas'' (ISBN 0375507256) describes an imagined life of an 18th Century American traveller who ends up on the Chatham Islands. He describes a number of incidents involving Moriori and Maori and "western" peoples, as well as giving a brief history of the Moriori people.

References


1. Archaeology and holocene sand dune stratigraphy on Chatham Island, , B, McFadgen, Journal of the Royal Society of New Zealand,
2. ''Guns, Germs, and Steel: The Fates of Human Societies", p. 53, Jared Diamond, 1997, New York, W.W. Norton.
3. Ross Clark (1994). ''Moriori and Maori: The Linguistic Evidence''. In Sutton, Douglas G. (Ed.) (1994), ''The Origins of the First New Zealanders''. Auckland: Auckland University Press, pp. 123–-135.
4. Denise Davis and Māui Solomon (2006). ''Moriori'', Te Ara - the Encyclopedia of New Zealand, updated 9-Jun-2006.
5. Kerry R. Howe (2006). ''Ideas of Māori origins'', Te Ara - the Encyclopedia of New Zealand, updated 9-Jun-2006.
6. Michael King (2000). ''Moriori: A People Rediscovered'' (Revised Edition). Published by Viking. ISBN 0-14-010391-0. Original edition 1989.
7. Kerry R. Howe (2003). ''The Quest for Origins: Who First Discovered and Settled New Zealand and the Pacific Islands?'' Auckland:Penguin, page 182

External links



Chatham Islands Council

Hokotehi Moriori Trust

1998 Information

Department of Conservation information

Unofficial Flag

History of Chatham Islands numismatics

Chatham Islands Council Act 1995

Massey University study of Chathams ecology

Information and pictures of Chatham Islands. The Sisters are also mentioned

★ Chathams Islands from satellite on Google Maps: on the center of the image

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