Blueskin Bay

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

LocationOtago, New Zealand
Coordinates45°44′S 170°35′E / 45.73°S 170.58°E / -45.73; 170.58
TypeTidal lagoon / estuary
Primary inflowsWaitati River, Careys Creek
Blueskin Bay
Waiputai (Māori)
A person pushing a tool through shallow water at sunrise
A person gathers cockles in Blueskin Bay at sunrise
Map of New Zealand
Map of New Zealand
Blueskin Bay
Location in New Zealand
LocationOtago, New Zealand
Coordinates45°44′S 170°35′E / 45.73°S 170.58°E / -45.73; 170.58
TypeTidal lagoon / estuary
Primary inflowsWaitati River, Careys Creek
Primary outflowsPacific Ocean (via channel near Rabbit Island)
Basin countriesNew Zealand
IslandsRabbit Island

Blueskin Bay is an estuary in coastal Otago, about 25 km north of Dunedin, New Zealand.

The name also unofficially describes the rural district which includes the northern slopes of Mount Cargill, the southern slopes of the Kilmog, and the townships of Doctors Point, Waitati, Evansdale, Warrington, and Seacliff.

A view of Blueskin Bay from Buttar's Peak, near Mount Cargill

The tidal lagoon is known in Māori as Waiputai.[1] "Blueskin Bay" historically referred to a wider stretch of coast from Heyward Point to Seacliff, including Pūrākaunui.[2] The name Blueskin is after Kahuti, a resident Māori personality of the area, whom Pākehā settlers nicknamed "Blueskin" for the large amount of Tā moko (traditional Māori tattooing) on his body. The name had been used as the nickname of a notorious 18th-century London criminal, Joseph "Blueskin" Blake.[2]

The estuary

View across Blueskin Bay towards Orokonui Valley

The Waitati River and Careys Creek enter Blueskin Bay at its southwest and northwest corners. A long sand spit from the northern headland closes the bay to a small channel to the Pacific Ocean at the southeast corner. Rabbit Island lies just inside this entrance.

Critically endangered, endemic Hector's dolphins live around the bay.

Shellfish

References

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