4.6 Article

Dilemma of Geoconservation of Monogenetic Volcanic Sites under Fast Urbanization and Infrastructure Developments with Special Relevance to the Auckland Volcanic Field, New Zealand

Journal

SUSTAINABILITY
Volume 13, Issue 12, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/su13126549

Keywords

geoheritage; geoconservation; geohazard; resilience; quarry; urban expansion; geodiversity; scoria cone; tuff ring; base surge

Funding

  1. Earthquake Commission of New Zealand AND Auckland Regional Council [GNS-EQC00046]

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Geoheritage plays a crucial role in developing strategies for natural hazard resilience, with a focus on raising global awareness and communicating importance to society. Urban areas like Auckland are facing challenges in preserving volcanic geoheritage, with abandoned quarry sites potentially serving as key locations for outreach and research. The rapid loss of volcanic geoheritage in Auckland contrasts with positive examples from older volcanic regions like the Bakony-Balaton UNESCO Global Geopark in Hungary.
Geoheritage is an important aspect in developing workable strategies for natural hazard resilience. This is reflected in the UNESCO IGCP Project (# 692. Geoheritage for Geohazard Resilience) that continues to successfully develop global awareness of the multifaced aspects of geoheritage research. Geohazards form a great variety of natural phenomena that should be properly identified, and their importance communicated to all levels of society. This is especially the case in urban areas such as Auckland. The largest socio-economic urban center in New Zealand, Auckland faces potential volcanic hazards as it sits on an active Quaternary monogenetic volcanic field. Individual volcanic geosites of young eruptive products are considered to form the foundation of community outreach demonstrating causes and consequences of volcanism associated volcanism. However, in recent decades, rapid urban development has increased demand for raw materials and encroached on natural sites which would be ideal for such outreach. The dramatic loss of volcanic geoheritage of Auckland is alarming. Here we demonstrate that abandoned quarry sites (e.g., Wiri Mountain) could be used as key locations to serve these goals. We contrast the reality that Auckland sites are underutilized and fast diminishing, with positive examples known from similar but older volcanic regions, such as the Mio/Pliocene Bakony-Balaton UNESCO Global Geopark in Hungary.

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