Coopers Lagoon / Muriwai

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Coopers_Lagoon_/_Muriwai an entity of type: Thing

Die Coopers Lagoon/Muriwai ist eine Lagune im Selwyn District der Region Canterbury auf der Südinsel von Neuseeland. rdf:langString
Coopers Lagoon / Muriwai is a small coastal waituna-type lagoon in the Canterbury region of New Zealand, located approximately half way between the mouth of the Rakaia River and the outlet of the much larger Lake Ellesmere / Te Waihora. While the present-day lagoon is separated from the nearby Canterbury Bight by approximately 100 metres (330 ft), the water of the lagoon is considered brackish and early survey maps show that, until recently, the lagoon was connected to the ocean by a small channel. The lagoon, along with the surrounding wetlands, has historically been an important mahinga kai (site of traditional significance for food and other natural resources) for local Māori. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Coopers Lagoon / Muriwai
rdf:langString Coopers Lagoon/Muriwai
rdf:langString Coopers Lagoon / Muriwai
rdf:langString Coopers Lagoon / Muriwai
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xsd:integer 68817969
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rdf:langString New Zealand
rdf:langString Youngs Creek
rdf:langString Selwyn District and Christchurch City, Canterbury region, South Island
rdf:langString New Zealand
rdf:langString Location of Coopers Lagoon / Muriwai
rdf:langString Brackish lagoon
xsd:string -43.8583 172.3001
rdf:langString Die Coopers Lagoon/Muriwai ist eine Lagune im Selwyn District der Region Canterbury auf der Südinsel von Neuseeland.
rdf:langString Coopers Lagoon / Muriwai is a small coastal waituna-type lagoon in the Canterbury region of New Zealand, located approximately half way between the mouth of the Rakaia River and the outlet of the much larger Lake Ellesmere / Te Waihora. While the present-day lagoon is separated from the nearby Canterbury Bight by approximately 100 metres (330 ft), the water of the lagoon is considered brackish and early survey maps show that, until recently, the lagoon was connected to the ocean by a small channel. The lagoon, along with the surrounding wetlands, has historically been an important mahinga kai (site of traditional significance for food and other natural resources) for local Māori. In 1998, Coopers Lagoon was officially given a dual place name as part of a Treaty of Waitangi settlement with Ngāi Tahu, receiving the name Coopers Lagoon / Muriwai.
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xsd:double 20000.0
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xsd:double 760.0
<Geometry> POINT(172.30009460449 -43.858299255371)

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