- Zealand.
Archived from the
original on 2023-02-02.
Retrieved 2023-11-15. "
Nohoanga Site
Information Sheet" (PDF). Te Rūnanga o Ngāi Tahu.
August 2020. Retrieved...
- and
southern Māori. Note
several regional variations, such as
Nohoka (
Nohoanga, a
place or seat),
tikaka (tikanga, customs), āhana/ōhona (ana / ōna, alienable...
- Island).
Numerous kāinga
mahinga kai (food-gathering places) and kāinga
nohoanga (settlements) were
located around the lake. The Kāti Māmoe
settlement at...
- Wānaka was Para
karehu or Parakārehu. Take Kārara was a Kāi Tahu kāinga
nohoanga (settlement) at the
southern end of Lake Wānaka,
including Ruby Island...
- of the 1998 Ngāi Tahu
Claims Settlement Act, Ngāi Tahu were
granted a
nohoanga (seasonal
gathering site) at the
lagoon and
statutory acknowledgment of...
-
named Taare Wetere Te Kahu
identified Whareakeake as a
traditional kāinga
nohoanga (place of residence) and kāinga
mahinga kai (place of food production)...
-
placement of the
range along this
route saw the
eastern foothills used as a
nohoanga, or a
seasonal occupation site used when Māori were p****ing
through the...
-
included a
promise to
allow access to
traditional mahinga kai and
kaika nohoanga (seasonal camps) and by the 1850s Māori were
barred from
access to their...
- (double
hulled sailing canoes).
Various areas may have been
sites for
nohoanga (temporary food
gathering camps),
gathering potable water,
mahinga kai...
- was part of an
important mahinga kai (food-gathering place) and kāinga
nohoanga (settlement area) for
early Māori. The
swampy ground made the area difficult...