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… service. The line of 3 ½ miles from Grahamstown (now Thames), opened in 1872, was run by steam locomotives. …
… occurrences being 15–20 million tons of iron sulphide near Thames, averaging 7–8 per cent sulphur. At Parengarenga …
… their portraits. Towards the end of the year he visited Thames, where he conceived the idea of painting a Maori …
… Sound in 1792, timber and flax trading in the Firth of Thames in 1794–95; through the later 1790s occasional …
… become naturalised in very wet swamps, especially in the Thames. Other pussy willows grown are S. caprea and S. …
… won 2–1; v. Manawatu, won 4–3; v. Nelson, won 3–0; v. Thames, won 5–0; v. Wellington, won 2–0; v. Wanganui, won …
… former swampland of the Hauraki Plain to reach the Firth of Thames. The largest river of the North Auckland Peninsula is …
… of Rotorua and the Bay of Plenty and the Ngati Maru of the Thames area. In these areas the pattern is used on pataka …
… friend. In January 1815, when Marsden visited Te Haupa at Thames, Te Morenga accompanied him and acted as his …
… and he immediately took passage in a small schooner for the Thames, Mercury Bay, and Tauranga. Here he made preparations …