Similar to the the Pamukkale terraces in Turkey, New Zealand's Pink and White Terraces were considered the 8th wonder of the natural world. Formed over thousands of years by limestone deposits left by hot springs, the pools of water and terraces were a major New Zealand tourist attraction until the violent 1886 eruption of Mount Tarawera completely destroyed them.
Visitors travelled by steamer to Tauranga, taking a bridle track to Ohinemutu on the shores of Lake Rotorua, a coach trip to Te Wairoa, a two-hour canoe journey, and finally a walk over the narrow isthmus separating the swampy shores of Lake Rotomahana from Lake Tarawera.
The White Terraces (Te Tarata - the tattooed rock) were the larger and more beautiful, covering seven acres and falling 30 metres to Lake Rotomahana. Their frontage at the bottom spanned 240 metres.
Otukapuarangi (Fountain of the Clouded Sky), or the Pink Terraces, ascended to the crater platform where 3 metre-deep basins were filled with clear blue water.
Victorian travellers recorded their experience in a rich legacy of art, photographs and words.
Writer Anthony Trollope enjoyed a bath in one of the pools of the Pink Terrace in 1874:
"In the bath, when you strike your chest against it, it is soft to the touch, you press yourself against it and it is smooth.....The baths are shell-like in shape, like vast open shells, the walls of which are concave and the lips ornamented in a thousand forms."
High-res Photo
Visitors travelled by steamer to Tauranga, taking a bridle track to Ohinemutu on the shores of Lake Rotorua, a coach trip to Te Wairoa, a two-hour canoe journey, and finally a walk over the narrow isthmus separating the swampy shores of Lake Rotomahana from Lake Tarawera.
The White Terraces (Te Tarata - the tattooed rock) were the larger and more beautiful, covering seven acres and falling 30 metres to Lake Rotomahana. Their frontage at the bottom spanned 240 metres.
Otukapuarangi (Fountain of the Clouded Sky), or the Pink Terraces, ascended to the crater platform where 3 metre-deep basins were filled with clear blue water.
Victorian travellers recorded their experience in a rich legacy of art, photographs and words.
Writer Anthony Trollope enjoyed a bath in one of the pools of the Pink Terrace in 1874:
"In the bath, when you strike your chest against it, it is soft to the touch, you press yourself against it and it is smooth.....The baths are shell-like in shape, like vast open shells, the walls of which are concave and the lips ornamented in a thousand forms."
High-res Photo
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