Everything about Aoraki Mount Cook National Park totally explained
Aoraki/Mount Cook National Park is situated in the
South Island of
New Zealand near the town of
Twizel. Aoraki/Mount Cook village lies within the park. The area was formally gazetted as a national park in October 1953 and consists of reserves that were established as early as 1887 to protect the area's significant vegetation and landscape.
Geography
The park covers a little over 700 km². Glaciers cover 40% of the park area, notably the
Tasman Glacier on the slopes of
Aoraki/Mount Cook itself.
Of New Zealand's 20 peaks over 3,000 metres, all except Mount Aspiring lie in the park. These include New Zealand's highest mountain,
Aoraki/Mount Cook, at 3753 metres. Other prominent peaks include
Mount Tasman, Mount Hicks, Mount Sefton, and Mount Elie de Beaumont. The mountains of the Southern Alps in general are young, less than ten million years old, and are still building. Uplift in the region of the national park is at the rate of 50 centimetres per century.
The park is also part of
Te Wahipounamu South Westland
World Heritage Site in recognition of its outstanding natural values.
Flora and fauna
Most of the park is situated above the tree line so that the plant life consists mainly of alpine plants such as the Mount Cook lily, (Ranunculus lyalli), which is really the largest buttercup in the world., the large mountain daisies and wild spaniard or spear grass. Birdlife consists of species like the
kea, the only alpine
parrot and the well-camouflaged
pipit. Introduced chamois, Himalayan tahr and red deer can be hunted.
Recreation
The park is popular for
tramping,
skiing,
hunting and
mountaineering.
Department of Conservation administer activities in the park. Popular species with hunters include
red deer and
Himalayan tahr.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Aoraki Mount Cook National Park'.
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