ithout doubt the most striking physical
features of the Auckland area are its volcanoes. On any fine day go to the top of such
vantage points around the city as Mt Eden, Mt Albert and One Tree Hill - themselves
extinct volcanic cones - and you will enjoy panoramic views of the Auckland landscape
dotted with the abundant evidence of prior volcanic activity.
To the layperson, cones perhaps
most typify volcanic activity, but eruptions also leave other marks on the land. Some of
these are the waterfilled depressions exemplified by Lake Pupuke and Orakei and Panmure
Basins.
Few of the cones have retained their original unsullied symmetry. Offering, as they
did, ideal strategic defense points to the Maori in their frequent warring over the much
coveted lands hereabouts, they were enthusiastically reshaped into the terraces, ramparts
and pits of fighting pa. Judging by the enormous quantities of soil that were moved by
primitive tools and sheer muscle power, fear of attack must have been an effective
motivating force. In any event, muscle power was not in short supply in the pre-Pakeha
period. Indications are that the Auckland area was among the most densely settled and most
coveted areas in all Aotearoa, due, in no small part, to the fertile soils and equitable
climate of the region.
All this fortification was to little avail, however, particularly when
the northern tribes became the first to obtain muskets, and at the time of the first
Pakeha settlement the Tamaki Isthmus, where Auckland is now centred, was largely
depopulated.
Captain David Rough, who was among the first to inspect the settlement
site, wrote in 1840:
I climbed up the cliffs to where Ponsonby now is and beheld a vast expanse of
undulating country, mostly covered with fern and manuka scrub; several volcanic hills in
sight and, near the shore, valleys and ravines in which many species of native plants were
growing, whilst the projecting cliffs and headlands were covered with pohutukawa trees -
not a sign of human habitation or cultivation, the nearest village being out of sight.