• Millennium. Part 3: Urban transformations

    New Zealand  1998.11.11

    In issue: Stamp(s): 6   

    Printing: lithography

    Printable Version

  • Number by catalogue:  Michel: 1730   Yvert: 1659   Scott: 1558  

    Perforation type: 14x14 ¼

    Subject:

    80 cents. Transformations of the city of Auckland*, in two photos of 1852 and 1998.

    Additional:

    *The Auckland metropolitan area, in the North Island of New Zealand, is the largest and most populous urban area in the country with over 1.4 million residents, 31 percent of the country's population. Demographic trends indicate that it will continue to grow faster than the rest of the country. Increasingly cosmopolitan, Auckland also has the largest Polynesian population of any city in the world, and has seen many people of Asian ethnicity move there in the last two decades.

    The metropolitan area is made up of Auckland City (excluding the Hauraki Gulf islands), North Shore City, the urban parts of Waitakere and Manukau cities, and Papakura District and some urban parts of Rodney and Franklin Districts. In Māori its name is Tāmaki-makau-rau, or the transliterated version of Auckland, Ākarana.

    Auckland lies between the Hauraki Gulf of the Pacific Ocean to the east, the low Hunua Ranges to the south-east, the Manukau Harbour to the south-west, and the Waitakere Ranges and smaller ranges to the west and north-west. The central part of the urban area occupies a narrow isthmus between the Manukau Harbour on the Tasman Sea and the Waitemata Harbour on the Pacific Ocean. It is one of the few cities in the world to have harbours on two separate major bodies of water.

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    The photo of 1852 used on stamp, well shows an arrangement of a known mill for that moment:

    Topics: Mills within the landscapes Windmills