Pink and White Terraces revealed

Scientists using robotic underwater vehicles to map the bottom of Lake Rotomahana are certain they have found part of the Pink Terraces sitting on the lake floor.
The discovery was made this week during a joint New Zealand-American project to map the lake floor and investigate the large geothermal system there.


Pink Terraces, Roto Mahana, 1886 by John Philemon Backhouse, Oil on postcard. SOURCE: Alexander Turnbull Library, Wellington, NZ, G-452-3-2

Side-scan sonar and bathymetric data collected by two Remus 100 autonomous underwater vehicles clearly show crescent-shaped terraced structures in about 60m of water where the Pink Terraces were located prior to 1886. They are covered by a brownish lake sediment.
Underwater photographs show terrace edges as well as lake floor sediments.
The world famous Pink and White Terraces were destroyed and vanished in the eruption of Mount Tarawera on June 10, 1886.
GNS Science project leader Cornel de Ronde says the team was elated at discovering what was once described as the eighth wonder of the natural world.
'The first sonar image gave a hint of a terraced structure so we scanned the area twice more and we are now 95 per cent certain we are seeing the bottom two tiers of the Pink Terraces.”
Cornel says the rest of the Pink Terraces were either destroyed during the eruption, or are still concealed under thick sediment not able to be penetrated by the side-scan sonar signal.
The scientists found no sign of the larger White Terraces in the part of the lake that matched their location prior to 1886. The two terraces were separated by several hundred meters prior to the eruption.
The project was a collaboration involving GNS Science, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution in Massachusetts, Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory at Columbia University in New York, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration in Seattle, and the University of Waikato.
'The original purpose of this 10-day mission was to map the lake floor and investigate the extensive geothermal system under Lake Rotomahana and how it evolved from an on-land geothermal system to a submerged one. Anything else was a bonus,” says Cornel.
'This discovery puts to rest more than a century of speculation as to whether any part of the Pink and White Terraces survived the eruption. Highlights in a science career don't come any better than this.”
Cornel paid tribute to colleagues from Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI) who brought their world-class underwater technology and camera systems to New Zealand to accomplish the work.
'This result would not have been possible without the team from Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution and their American colleagues. Their contribution has been huge.”
He also acknowledges support from the Te Arawa Lakes Trust Board, the University of Waikato for logistics support, and tourism operator Waimangu Volcanic Valley, which helped with access to the lake.

4 comments

pink&white terraces

Posted on 02-02-2011 13:33 | By ajala

Has the location of the terraces also changed lakes!! I was always of the opinion that they were at the bottom of Lake Tarawera.I hope this is not another example of ethnic renaming.


DOES IT MATTER WHERE AJALA

Posted on 02-02-2011 17:41 | By The Master

They will claim all the waterways, all the beaches, all the hills, all teh TV stations, all teh radio ways, and most importantly all the benefits payable by WINZ, government and all others ... its worse than we thought Jim !


History lesson

Posted on 02-02-2011 19:20 | By dogsbody

it was the Mount Tarawera eruption and the subsequent enlarging of Rotomahana that swamped the terraces, as I understand it. I'm not Maori and know where you are coming from, but stop trying to read racial issues into everything! It's extremism on both sides that is threatening to screw this country.

on a positive note, maybe it can become a world famous dive destination. is 60m too deep?


The Master of all rants

Posted on 03-02-2011 10:29 | By Jolene Publique

Why ruin a nice story with your rantings? Are you commenting on the right story as there is nothing in this story about anyone wanting to claim anything. Awesome work scientists, a fantastic discovery!


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