Roads or streets?

During Auckland’s most recent lockdown, I got in the habit of going on a passeggiata....

Gone fishing

If you had looked in the New Zealand Geographic office fridge in the summer of...

Snakes try something new

When an asteroid struck Earth 66 million years ago, three-quarters of all species became extinct,...

Gone to the dogs

When humans first reached New Zealand shores, sometime around the late 13th century, they were...

Rock stars

The previous issue of New Zealand Geographic featured a story about rock hounds—people who fossick...

Life under ice

A colony of icefish (Neopagetopsis ionah) 60 million nests in size swathes the seafloor of...

Hungry, hungry humpbacks

Baleen whales eat three times as much food as we previously thought they did, according...

Champion divers

Black-browed albatrosses dive deeper and longer for kai than previously thought. The were believed to...

What’s eating kākahi?

The evidence: piles of discarded freshwater mussel shells, or kākahi. The crime: eating threatened species....

Jade Kake wants to reinvent how we live

Her idea: to revive the papa kāinga, the communal Māori village....

A plague on all our houses

How one bacterium built our health system....

Less is more 

Nelson Tasman’s innovative zero carbon itinerary allows travellers to do good things while supporting good...

The island that blew up

When Hunga Tonga-Hunga Ha‘apai erupted in Tonga on January 15, sending a shockwave around the...

Streetscapes

Since 1955, New Zealand has prioritised cars in the design of our cities and streets....

Minerals in the deep

In February 2022, three mining companies were granted permission to explore the Cook Islands’ submarine...

Ivory Lake Hut

This alpine hut on the West Coast was set up to house glaciologists, but as...

Speedway

Andy MacDonald documents Nelson-based speedway driver Morgan Dumelow....

Catching rays

How hard could it be to find a manta ray? They’re six metres wide, after...

Too tasty for its own good

With its bright-red flowers shaped like a parrot’s beak, ngutukākā—also called kākābeak—is distinctive and delicious....

Why can’t I taste with my feet?

Fish taste with their fins. Butterflies taste with their legs. Octopuses taste with everything. Cats...

Magazine

Issue 198

Mar - Apr 2026

Black-Backed Gulls
Meth & HIV in Fiji
Dung beetles
Centro
Rogaining

Issue 198 Mar - Apr 2026

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