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Story: Te Arawa

White Terraces, Lake Rotomahana, 1890

Image
White Terraces, Lake Rotomahana, 1890

This oil painting shows the famed silica terraces which were colonial New Zealand’s premier tourist attraction. The White Terraces were known as Te Tarata (the tattooed rock). The Pink Terraces, known as Ō-tū-kapua-rangi (fountain of the clouded sky), were smaller and lower. Tourists were taken to the terraces in whaleboats or canoes. When the terraces were obliterated in the Tarawera eruption of 1886, many Te Arawa lost jobs as the tourist trade dried up.

Using this item

Alexander Turnbull Library

Reference: G-630

by Charles Blomfield

Permission of the Alexander Turnbull Library, National Library of New Zealand, Te Puna Mātauranga o Aotearoa, must be obtained before any re-use of this image.

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How to cite this page

Paul Tapsell, Te Arawa – The Tarawera eruption, Te Ara – the Encyclopedia of New Zealand, https://teara.govt.nz/en/artwork/1544/white-terraces-lake-rotomahana-1890 (accessed 4 June 2026).

Story by Paul Tapsell, published 4 March 2009, updated 1 March 2017.

Comments

Chris Reynolds
29 October 2010
These terraces must have been an amazing sight!! It's such a shame they are no longer. I think the date for this picture is wrong, the Tarawera eruption of 1886 destroyed both white & pink terraces.