Auckland New Zealand

 

Welcome to Auckland New Zealand

 

auckland new zealand:auckland new zealand populatoin

Information about Auckland, New Zealand and links relating to Auckland New Zealand       

   

 

Auckland is also called the city of sails,and for good reason as you will see further down the page

     Auckland New Zealand  : Auckland New Zealand Populatoin                                 Auckland New Zealand Populatoin

 

Welcome to Auckland New Zealand

 


Google

 

Where Are The Regions of New Zealand?

Where is New Zealand, exactly? New Zealand is two islands in the Pacific, but it is not a Pacific Island.

All those islands we normally think of as "Pacific": New Caledonia, Fiji, Tonga, the Cook Islands, and Tahiti, lie between 15 and 23 degrees South.

They are north of the Tropic of Capricorn...

... New Zealand is south of it. By a long way.

New Zealand stretches from 35 to 47 degrees south, and covers 270 000 square kilometres. It is:

  • the size of Burkina Faso, Colorado, Equador, the UK, or the Western Sahara
  • twice the size of Bangladesh, Fujian Province (China) or Greece
  • four times the size of Sri Lanka
  • half the size of Madagascar, France or Kenya
  • and would fit comfortably into the Caspian or Baltic Seas...

Some geography...

For the sake of convenience, we can divide up the country into 2 degree bands of latitude. Down here, the numbers get bigger as we travel south. And it gets colder. Down here, birds fly NORTH for the winter...

The regions of New Zealand, http://www.luxury-new-zealand.com/regions-of-new-zealand.html/ fall into these bands as follows:

  • 34-36 Northland
  • 36-38 Auckland, The Coromandel
  • 38-40 Bay of Plenty, Waikato, Rotorua, Taupo, Eastland, Hawkes Bay, Wanganui-Manawatu, Taranaki
  • 40-42 Wellington, Wairarapa, Marlborough, Nelson
  • 42-44 The West Coast, Canterbury, Christchurch
  • 44-46 Mt Cook-MacKenzie, Wanaka, Queenstown, Otago, Dunedin, Fiordland
  • 46-48 Southland, including Stewart Island

What else can you find at these latitudes?

Following the same bands of latitude around the Southern Hemisphere, the regions of New Zealand share their parallels with:

  • 34-36 Buenos Aires, Adelaide and Canberra in Australia, and Cape Town in South Africa (in fact, Cape Town is NORTH of the northern-most point of New Zealand, and Sydney is the same...)
  • 36-38 Auckland and the Coromandel lie in the same band as Melbourne
  • 38-40 Bay of Plenty, Waikato, Hawkes Bay, Manawatu, Taranaki cover large slices of Argentina and Chile
  • 40-42 Wellington, Wairarapa, Marlborough, Nelson - more Chile.
  • 42-44 West Coast, Canterbury (Christchurch) are neighbours with Hobart
  • 44-46 Otago, Southland (Dunedin) is the same as... Patagonia! (just look at the landscapes to see why...)
  • 46-48 more Patagonia...

The Northern Hemisphere

While it's not an accurate comparison, New Zealand is in the middle of the ocean with no part of it further than 130 kilometres (about 80 miles) from the coast, in the same bands of latitude in the Northern Hemisphere you will find (moving north):

  • 34-36 Cyprus, Kabul, Tokyo, Los Angeles
  • 36-38 Seoul, Tunis, Athens, San Francisco
  • 38-40 Ankara, Beijing, Lisbon
  • 40-42 Istanbul, Tashkent, Madrid, Rome, New York
  • 42-44 Almaty, Vladivostok, Sofia, Toronto, Boston
  • 44-46 Bordeaux, Milan, Belgrade, Bucharest, Ottowa
  • 46-48 Geneva, Seattle

Now you know where you're heading. All you need to do is get here...

About The Author

Stephen Hay invites you to explore the opportunities for luxury travel and accommodation in New Zealand.

The site, http://www.luxury-new-zealand.com/, brings together all luxury offerings in New Zealand. Private jet companies, charter yachts, luxury rental cars, luxury adventure holidays and 165 luxury lodges, resorts and boutique hotels for your enjoyment.

To list your property or service, visit http://www.luxury-new-zealand.com/marketing-luxury.html.

© Stephen Hay All Rights Reserved. You may use this article in its entirety with this Resource Box and links.

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Stephen_Hay