Bookhabit - Abundance and Constraint: A Short History of Water Use in New Zealand. By Robert Garry Law - New Zealand has an abundance of water but still there has been conflict over its use. Maori managed water and asserted their right to its use partic
Bookhabit - Abundance and Constraint: A Short History of Water Use in New Zealand
New Zealand has an abundance of water but still there has been conflict over its use. Maori managed water and asserted their right to its use particularly for fishing. Colonists soon came into conflict with Maori over water, disrupting traditional fishing through rafting logs, introducing new species and using waterways for wastes. Water was an important early source of power in colonial New Zealand used for milling a variety of products and in hydraulic mining. Gold mining was intimately connected to early hydroelectric development, a use which came to have the most profound effects on New Zealand's waterways. The Law followed the different forms of use of water as they developed. Through mining contamination many rivers were declared sludge canals and their banks taken into Crown ownership - the Queens Chain - to prevent court actions by the adjoining owners. Wetlands have been much affected by development and there is a sad list of lost or endangered waterbird species. Despite a long history of disputes over allocation New Zealand's Law on water allocation is little developed.
Illustrated with many historical pictures.
The first chapter is free - there is a small charge for downloading the whole book.
New Zealand has an abundance of water but still there has been conflict over its use. Maori managed water and asserted their right to its use particularly for fishing. Colonists soon came into conflict with Maori over water, disrupting traditional fishing through rafting logs, introducing new species and using waterways for wastes. Water was an important early source of power in colonial New Zealand used for milling a variety of products and in hydraulic mining. Gold mining was intimately connected to early hydroelectric development, a use which came to have the most profound effects on New Zealand's waterways. The Law followed the different forms of use of water as they developed. Through mining contamination many rivers were declared sludge canals and their banks taken into Crown ownership - the Queens Chain - to prevent court actions by the adjoining owners. Wetlands have been much affected by development and there is a sad list of lost or endangered waterbird species. Despite a long history of disputes over allocation New Zealand's Law on water allocation is little developed.
Illustrated with many historical pictures.
The first chapter is free - there is a small charge for downloading the whole book.