Harania Creek Explained

Harania Creek
Map:
Type:line
Plain:yes
Zoom:13
Frame-Align:center
Frame-Width:270
Frame-Height:270
Stroke-Color:
  1. 0000ff
Stroke-Width:2
Map Size:270px
Pushpin Map:Auckland#New Zealand
Pushpin Map Size:270px
Pushpin Map Caption:Mouth of the Harania Creek
Subdivision Type1:Country
Subdivision Name1:New Zealand
Subdivision Type2:Region
Subdivision Name2:Auckland Region
Source1 Location:Māngere East
Source1 Coordinates:-36.9586°N 174.8166°W
Mouth:Māngere Inlet
Mouth Coordinates:-36.9461°N 174.8193°W
Progression:Harania CreekMāngere InletManukau Harbour

Harania Creek is the name of the shallow estuarine waterway in the Māngere Inlet on the Manukau Harbour, Auckland, New Zealand. The area extends from 1500m (4,900feet) east of the Māngere Bridge when the tide is fully out, for 1 kilometre to the end of the harbour in the heart of Māngere.

The waterway system is fed by a number of small open and piped creeks which bring runoff from residential, industrial and park areas in Ōtāhuhu, Māngere East, and Favona.[1] The largest of these fresh water runoffs is the Māngere East catchment which emerges from behind the Pacific Steel reclamation.

The creek is bound by mangroves in its upper reaches. These mangroves emerged from approximately 1970s onwards, following the end of significant emissions from several large slaughterhouses. The mangrove roots create a tight course for the creek, which has deepened over time.

The area has been the subject of study into the geomorphology of fresh water flowing through a tidal system by the Auckland University Geology Department. This looked at changing sea levels over time.

The Norana Esplanade Walkway[2] opened in 2020 and crosses the Harania Creek estuary and its associated mangroves.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Looking south west from Otahuhu across Harania Creek. Digital NZ. 28 February 2018.
  2. Web site: OurAuckland. Norana Reserve walkway opens to public. 2021-08-19. OurAuckland. en.