UNESCO World
Heritage Sites:
New Zealand
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The World Heritage Sites presented here are provided to illustrate the places in a country that are regarded as "world treasures"; these are the sites that
countries feel best represent their heritage and place in world history. The
World Heritage Site may represent either a cultural or a natural treasure. We
provide them to you in the belief that they reveal the "best of the best" and
should be considered for visits by all travelers.
Complete descriptions of the UNESCO World Heritage
Sites can be found at the UNESCO world heritage site http://whc.unesco.org.
We urge you to visit the site and support UNESCO's and individual
countries efforts to preserve World Heritage Sites.
Te Wahipounamu - South-West New Zealand
The landscape in this park, situated in south-west New Zealand, has been
shaped by successive glaciations into fjords, rocky coasts, towering cliffs,
lakes and waterfalls. Two-thirds of the park is covered with southern beech
and podocarps, some of which are over 800 years old. The kea, the only alpine
parrot in the world, lives in the park, as does the rare and endangered takahe,
a large flightless bird.
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Tongariro National Park
In 1993 Tongariro became the first property to be inscribed on the World
Heritage List under the revised criteria describing cultural landscapes.
The mountains at the heart of the park have cultural and religious
significance for the Maori people and symbolize the spiritual links
between this community and its environment. The park has active and
extinct volcanoes, a diverse range of ecosystems and some spectacular
landscapes.
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New Zealand Sub-Antarctic Islands
The New Zealand Sub-Antarctic Islands consist of five island groups
(the Snares, Bounty Islands, Antipodes Islands, Auckland Islands and
Campbell Island) in the Southern Ocean south-east of New Zealand. The
islands, lying between the Antarctic and Subtropical Convergences and the
seas, have a high level of productivity, biodiversity, wildlife population
densities and endemism among birds, plants and invertebrates. They are
particularly notable for the large number and diversity of pelagic
seabirds and penguins that nest there. There are 126 bird species in
total, including 40 seabirds of which five breed nowhere else in the
world.
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