copy and paste this google map to your website or blog!
Press copy button and paste into your blog or website.
(Please switch to 'HTML' mode when posting into your blog. Examples: WordPress Example, Blogger Example)
Tongariro National Park Visitor Information Welcome to Tongariro National Park! Find out what to do, where to stay and how to plan your trip to this UNESCO Dual World Heritage Area
Tongariro National Park Tongariro is New Zealand's oldest national park and a dual World Heritage area This status recognises the park's important Māori cultural and spiritual associations as well as its outstanding volcanic features
Tongariro National Park - Wikipedia Tongariro National Park covers an area of 786 km 2 (303 sq mi) surrounding the massif of the three active volcanoes Mount Ruapehu, Mount Ngauruhoe, and Mount Tongariro in the centre of the North Island
Tongariro National Park | 100% Pure New Zealand Tongariro became New Zealand’s first national park in 1887 Just over 100 years later, the park was awarded dual UNESCO World Heritage status for both its cultural significance to Māori, as well as its outstanding natural features
Tongariro National Park | Great Journeys NZ | Official Tongariro National Park in New Zealand holds profound spiritual significance from a Māori perspective The three volcanic peaks of Tongariro, Ngāuruhoe, and Ruapehu are considered sacred and personified ancestors in Māori mythology
Tongariro National Park - Go New Zealand Created in 1887, Tongariro National Park was New Zealand's first National Park, and the fourth National Park to be created in the world Tongariro National Park has now gained international significance, by being awarded Dual World Heritage site status
Tongariro National Park Travel Guide – What to See Do The oldest national park in New Zealand, since it was declared so in 1887, and a UNESCO Dual World Heritage Site, Tongariro is more than just a beautiful face Tongariro is a cultural and spiritual site, shaped by three centuries of volcanic power and history rich with Māori people