Waiau Toa / Clarence River

Waiau Toa / Clarence River
View of the Waiau Toa Clarence River
The Waiau Toa / Clarence River, as viewed from State Highway 1 near the river's mouth
The Waiau Toa / Clarence River system.
Native nameWaiau Toa (Māori)
Location
CountryNew Zealand
RegionsCanterbury, Marlborough
Physical characteristics
SourceClarence Pass
 • locationSpenser Mountains
 • coordinates42°6′14″S 172°42′58″E / 42.10389°S 172.71611°E / -42.10389; 172.71611
MouthPacific Ocean
 • location
Clarence
 • coordinates
42°10′S 173°57′E / 42.167°S 173.950°E / -42.167; 173.950
 • elevation
Sea level
Length209 km (130 mi)
Basin features
Tributaries 
 • leftAcheron River, Dillon River, Gloster River, Bluff River
 • rightStyx River, Hossack River
WaterbodiesLake Tennyson

The Clarence River (Māori: Waiau Toa; officially Waiau Toa / Clarence River) is a major river which flows through the Kaikōura Ranges in the northeast of New Zealand's South Island. At roughly 209 kilometres (130 mi) long, it is the longest river in Canterbury and the eighth longest in New Zealand.

For its first 50 kilometres (31 mi), the river runs in a generally southeastern direction. It then turns northeast, running down a long straight valley between the Inland and Seaward Kaikōura Ranges. At the end of the Seaward Kaikōuras, the river meanders through undulating hill country before draining into the Pacific Ocean near the town of Clarence. A large part of the river is within the boundaries of Molesworth Station.

The river and its tributaries cut through rock formed on the seafloor of the Pacific during the late Cretaceous through to the middle Eocene, during which period the majority of New Zealand was at points almost entirely submerged.[1] This provides a useful record of this time period, and has contributed to our understanding of several events which took place during that era.[2][3][4] The area also provides valuable insight into more recent geological events, having been heavily affected by the 2016 Kaikōura earthquake.

  1. ^ "The geological history of New Zealand". sci.waikato.ac.nz. Retrieved 31 December 2021.
  2. ^ Hollis, C.J.; Gerald R. Dickens; Bradley D. Field; Craig M. Jones; C. Percy Strong (2005). "The Paleocene-Eocene transition at Mead Stream, New Zealand: a southern Pacific record of early Cenozoic global change". Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology. 215 (3–4): 313–343. doi:10.1016/j.palaeo.2004.09.011.
  3. ^ Nicolo, M.J.; Gerald R. Dickens; Christopher J. Hollis; James C. Zachos (2007). "Multiple early Eocene hyperthermals: Their sedimentary expression on the New Zealand continental margin and in the deep sea". Geology. 35 (8): 699–702. Bibcode:2007Geo....35..699N. doi:10.1130/g23648a.1.
  4. ^ Slotnick, B.S.; Gerald R. Dickens; Micah J. Nicolo; Christopher J. Hollis; James S. Crampton; James C. Zachos; Appy Sluijs (2012). "Large-amplitude variations in carbon cycling and terrestrial weathering during the Latest Paleocene and Earliest Eocene: The record at Mead Stream, New Zealand" (PDF). Journal of Geology. 120 (5): 487–505. Bibcode:2012JG....120..487S. doi:10.1086/666743. hdl:1911/88269. S2CID 55327247.

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