New Zealand American Fiordland Expedition

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Country
  • New Zealand Edit this on Wikidata
Country of origin
  • New Zealand
  • United States Edit this on Wikidata
Start9 January 1949 Edit this on Wikidata
New Zealand American Fiordland Expedition
Country
  • New Zealand Edit this on Wikidata
Location
Country of origin
  • New Zealand
  • United States Edit this on Wikidata
Start9 January 1949 Edit this on Wikidata
EndMay 1949 Edit this on Wikidata
Leader
Sponsor
Funder
Vessels
Participants

The New Zealand American Fiordland Expedition was a research expedition organised by the Department of Internal Affairs in 1949 to undertake research into elk (wapiti) as well as other biodiversity, surveying and geology in the Fiordland National Park.[1][2][3]

In 1947, American Colonel John K. Howard participated in a preliminary reconnaissance survey of Fiordland, South Island, New Zealand for elk (wapiti).[3] Wapiti are not native to New Zealand; they were introduced in 1905 from the United States into Fiordland National Park.[3] After that study, Howard was interested in organising a comparative scientific study of wapiti and their habitat in their native United States and their established range in Fiordland.[3]

Fiordland is well-known for its isolation, steep mountainous terrain, and notoriously bad weather, so such an expedition would need good communication, several camps, a large and experienced team, and the support of several governmental departments.[3][4] Howard first recruited the American expert on wapiti, Olaus Murie, to be scientific leader, and then set up a management committee to plan the expedition into Fiordland to study wapiti.[3] The expedition was funded by a grant in 1948 from the New Zealand Cabinet to the Department of Internal Affairs, which called it The New Zealand-American Fiordland Expedition.[3]

One of the expedition scientists photographed with kea by expedition photographer Kenneth Bigwood in March 1949

The main aim of the expedition was to study the wapiti population in its breeding grounds in Fiordland. However scientists from other fields of study would also study other aspects of zoology, botany, geology, forest survey, survey and photography.[3]

Participants

In addition to three American scientists, the vast majority of members of the large interdisciplinary team included New Zealand scientists, photographers, surveyors, and field personnel. Forty-nine people are listed as being "official personnel" on the expedition, but more than 60 took part in it.[3] Only one of the 49 official participants was a woman, the New Zealand botanist, Ruth Mason.

Leaders

Biologists

Surveyors

Photographers

Field personnel

  • R. V. McKane, field leader
  • Kenneth Miers, deputy field leader
  • D. Le Beau, shooter
  • D. Jenkins, shooter
  • R. C. Borlase, cook
  • Max R. Farrell, NZRAMC medical sergeant, medical officer
  • Frank E. Barlow, wireless operator
  • J. Lutterell, assistant to John K. Howard
  • R. Dunstan, service personnel
  • W. R. Drower, service personnel
  • W. Gardiner, service personnel
  • J. Cornish, service personnel
  • H. Dixon, service personnel
  • M. Logan, service personnel
  • A. F. Allen, service personnel
  • C. Templeton, service personnel
  • R. Ensor, service personnel
  • V. R. Woods, service personnel
  • G. H. Ross, service personnel
  • G. Sharpe, service personnel

Others mentioned in the preliminary reports or elsewhere but not on list of official personnel

Source:[8]

  • Alexander J. Black, captain of MV Alert
  • E. J. Herrick, experienced wapiti stalker
  • Kenneth Sutherland, experienced wapiti stalker
  • Leslie Murrell
  • Robert Falla, Director of the Dominion Museum[9]

Expedition

In early January 1949, Howard and the team of field personnel sailed on the MV Alert with most of the expedition gear from Bluff and Milford to a small camp that they set up at Caswell Sound.[3] They prepared for the arrival of the scientific teams by unloading and packing stores and equipment, establishing camps, and cutting tracks for the rest of the expedition party.[3][10]

The base camp for the expedition was established on the banks of the Stillwater River, about 6 miles from the small beachhead camp at Caswell Sound, which had storage tents, a laboratory, a cookhouse, a wireless, and even electric lighting.[3] The field party hauled stores and equipment by land to Lake Marchant, and from there, prams with outboard motors were used to ship the gear to base camp.[3] Other smaller camps were established on the Stillwater River (two camps), Leslie Clearing (one), Glaisnock River (two), and Henry Saddle (one); the expedition also used several Ministry of Works' huts, including at George Sound, Lake Thomson and Lake Hankinson.[3]

Even though wapiti animals would be shot to make specimens of them, the expedition team only ate wapiti meat about six times, when a specimen happened to be shot near camp.[11] Additional camp stores therefore had to be replenished regularly. For the duration of the expedition from January through May 1949, stores were shipped via road from Invercargill using New Zealand Army trucks that transported them through the partially completed Homer Tunnel to Milford. From there, Alexander J. Black, captain of MV Alert, ran fortnightly trips by sea between Milford and the expedition's two main beachhead landing sites in Fiordland: Caswell Sound and George Sound.[3]

In early March, the expedition was also supplied by air drops from Queenstown to the upper Stillwater River camp.[12] For example on 5 March, packages weighing c. 35 pounds were dropped by parachute from aircraft, one package on each of five trips.[12] Some of the special supplies in each package that went above and beyond standard camp food included asparagus, coffee and Worcester sauce.[12] The main dates of the expedition were as follows:[3]

  • 9 January 1949: The field party, Howard, photographer and survey party travelled from Bluff and Milford to Caswell Sound.
  • 29 January 1949: The field party shifted stores from Milford to Caswell Sound.
  • 12 February 1949: The field party shifted stores from Milford to Caswell Sound.
  • 26 February 1949: The scientific teams (including Murie, zoologists, botanists (including Poole), entomologists and Lindsay, the preparator) arrived and began research around base camp, and smaller camps on the Stillwater River and Leslie Clearing. These scientists spent about 6 weeks in this area, visiting Mary Peaks (1 day), Leslie Clearing (5 days), Upper Stillwater Camp (10 days), Saddle Hill (1 day), George Sound (2 days), Henry Saddle (2 days) and Hankinson Hut (2 days), with the remaining days at base camp.[13]
  • 26 March 1949: Botanists Oliver and Zotov, together with Wodzicki and the forest surveyors, travelled from Dunedin to Caswell Sound.[9]
  • 26 March to 5 April 2024: The botanists collected vascular plants and bryophytes for the Dominion Museum around Caswell Sound, base camp, Leslie Clearing, and George Sound.[13]
  • 7 April 1949: The expedition moved to George Sound, also travelling to Hankinson Hut via Henry Saddle. Robert Falla was expected to arrive at the upper Stillwater camp for a brief stay.
  • 6-26 April 1949: Botanist Mason collected aquatic plants and identified plants eaten by wapiti, while the forest survey was also conducted for about a month starting from 26 March, in the George Sound area.[13]
  • 27 April 1949: Several expedition members, including the survey team, some scientists and a photographer (Miller, Litt, Dick, Moor, Mason, Lindsay, Forster, Bidgood) left Fiordland, returning to Invercargill.[14]
  • late April/early May 1949: The expedition moved to the Glaisnock River camps.
  • 5 May 1949: Murie departed Fiordland.
  • 7-8 May & 13 May 1949: The field party dismantled the camps and MV Alert completed its final sailings for this expedition from Caswell Sound and George Sound.[15] The Dominion Museum in Wellington then became the operational headquarters.[16]

Other zoologists, botanists, foresters and geologists arrived later than 26 February, remained for shorter periods, and worked independently to the main expedition party.[3]

Expedition publications

Accomplishments

References

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