25 September 2013
The September 2013 edition of NIWA's flagship publication, Water & Atmosphere.
A PDF copy is also available, and can be downloaded by clicking on the link below.
Water & Atmosphere 8, September 2013 (PDF 7.2 MB)
In this issue
Cook Strait quakes too small for landslide-tsunami
A seabed survey in Cook Strait by NIWA's flagship research vessel Tangaroa showed that the origin of the magnitude 6.5 July earthquake was a previously unknown 'blind' fault.New Zealand's tornado window
New Zealand appears to be in a period of slightly elevated incidence of tornadoes, according to NIWA scientist Dr Richard Turner.In brief: Storms not record breakers
Given the media coverage, you can be forgiven for thinking that the June storms were the worst ever to hit New Zealand.In brief: The mystery of the tam o’shanter
The discovery of seven new species of sea urchins, known as tam o'shanters, has helped resolve more than a hundred years of confusion about their distribution in New Zealand waters.In brief: Kiwis become citizen scientists
Social media hasn't got the crowd- sourcing phenomenon all to itself. Science has long been a user of information gathered from a large number of widespread people.In brief: Kaikoura tsunami hazard
NIWA Ocean Geologist Dr Joshu Mountjoy is checking the validity of a theory that a massive undersea landslide could hit Kaikoura with a 13-metre-high tsunami.In brief: NIWA takes to the skies to map seabed
Aerial photography is being used to map the shallow-water habitats of the southern Kaipara Harbour. The technique allows NIWA scientists to identify seagrass meadows – important for sustaining coastal fisheries such as snapper – down to their maximum growing depth of 3 to 4 metres below the low tide mark.In brief: Eels return to lake
Eels are returning to Lake Ōmāpere in Northland, thanks to efforts to prevent over-nutrification.In brief: Looking for the blue whales
It's long been thought that blue whales only transit through New Zealand waters when migrating between the Antarctic and equatorial waters. But a ground-breaking NIWA study into their distribution patterns off the south Taranaki coast confounds this hypothesis.In brief: Sweeping the floor
When Tangaroa was called to survey the site of the undersea earthquake that rocked Marlborough and Wellington, it was busy fulfilling the Government's Ocean Survey 20/20 initiative.In brief: Whitebait breeding sites found
A suburban Hamilton stream has turned out to be the first spawning ground ever found of the giant kokopu whitebait.Dust bowled
The sun scorched New Zealand's rural hinterland over the summer of 2013. The drought reached across more of the country than any other in the past 40 years. Mark Blackham examines how the nation coped.Chilled Calypso
Humanity wants to discover the reasons behind thinning ice, acidic water and rising temperatures in the Southern Ocean. Susan Pepperell finds that NIWA scientists are racing against time in taking on this challenge.Urban thirst
When Nature turns the tap off, urban water managers have their work cut out keeping ours turned on. In early 2013 they passed a stern test, but climate change and sustained urban growth are demanding new thinking, finds Colin Barkus.Solutions: Putting the sting into climate change preparation at the coast
Almost seven in ten Kiwis live along New Zealand's coastline. And that's where the impacts of climate variability and change are likely to be hardest felt.Profile: The fun of fieldwork
Petra Pearce's first job for NIWA was sifting through stormwater sediment – mud. Petra picked up the part-time job while studying science at university. "I learned first-hand the hard graft that goes into the glossy results and reports," she says, "and I loved it".Q&A: Weather or not
NIWA has launched two new online weather forecasting services designed to help Kiwis from different walks of life decide when to carry out weather- dependent activities.
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Cook Strait quakes too small for landslide-tsunami
Publication article25 September 2013A seabed survey in Cook Strait by NIWA's flagship research vessel Tangaroa showed that the origin of the magnitude 6.5 July earthquake was a previously unknown 'blind' fault. -
New Zealand's tornado window
Publication article25 September 2013New Zealand appears to be in a period of slightly elevated incidence of tornadoes, according to NIWA scientist Dr Richard Turner. -
In brief: Storms not record breakers
Publication article25 September 2013Given the media coverage, you can be forgiven for thinking that the June storms were the worst ever to hit New Zealand. -
In brief: The mystery of the tam o’shanter
Publication article25 September 2013The discovery of seven new species of sea urchins, known as tam o'shanters, has helped resolve more than a hundred years of confusion about their distribution in New Zealand waters. -
In brief: Kiwis become citizen scientists
Publication article25 September 2013Social media hasn't got the crowd- sourcing phenomenon all to itself. Science has long been a user of information gathered from a large number of widespread people. -
In brief: Kaikoura tsunami hazard
Publication article25 September 2013NIWA Ocean Geologist Dr Joshu Mountjoy is checking the validity of a theory that a massive undersea landslide could hit Kaikoura with a 13-metre-high tsunami. -
In brief: NIWA takes to the skies to map seabed
Publication article25 September 2013Aerial photography is being used to map the shallow-water habitats of the southern Kaipara Harbour. The technique allows NIWA scientists to identify seagrass meadows – important for sustaining coastal fisheries such as snapper – down to their maximum growing depth of 3 to 4 metres below the low tide mark. -
In brief: Eels return to lake
Publication article25 September 2013Eels are returning to Lake Ōmāpere in Northland, thanks to efforts to prevent over-nutrification. -
In brief: Looking for the blue whales
Publication article25 September 2013It's long been thought that blue whales only transit through New Zealand waters when migrating between the Antarctic and equatorial waters. But a ground-breaking NIWA study into their distribution patterns off the south Taranaki coast confounds this hypothesis. -
In brief: Sweeping the floor
Publication article25 September 2013When Tangaroa was called to survey the site of the undersea earthquake that rocked Marlborough and Wellington, it was busy fulfilling the Government's Ocean Survey 20/20 initiative. -
In brief: Whitebait breeding sites found
Publication article25 September 2013A suburban Hamilton stream has turned out to be the first spawning ground ever found of the giant kokopu whitebait. -
Dust bowled
Publication article25 September 2013The sun scorched New Zealand's rural hinterland over the summer of 2013. The drought reached across more of the country than any other in the past 40 years. Mark Blackham examines how the nation coped. -
Chilled Calypso
Publication article26 September 2013Humanity wants to discover the reasons behind thinning ice, acidic water and rising temperatures in the Southern Ocean. Susan Pepperell finds that NIWA scientists are racing against time in taking on this challenge. -
Urban thirst
Publication article26 September 2013When Nature turns the tap off, urban water managers have their work cut out keeping ours turned on. In early 2013 they passed a stern test, but climate change and sustained urban growth are demanding new thinking, finds Colin Barkus. -
Solutions: Putting the sting into climate change preparation at the coast
Publication article26 September 2013Almost seven in ten Kiwis live along New Zealand's coastline. And that's where the impacts of climate variability and change are likely to be hardest felt. -
Profile: The fun of fieldwork
Publication article26 September 2013Petra Pearce's first job for NIWA was sifting through stormwater sediment – mud. Petra picked up the part-time job while studying science at university. "I learned first-hand the hard graft that goes into the glossy results and reports," she says, "and I loved it". -
Q&A: Weather or not
Publication article26 September 2013NIWA has launched two new online weather forecasting services designed to help Kiwis from different walks of life decide when to carry out weather- dependent activities.