Spenser Mountains Explained

Spenser Mountains
Photo Size:250px
Country:New Zealand
Region Type:Region
Region:Tasman
Highest:Mount Una
Elevation M:2300
Coordinates:-42.25°N 202°W
Map:New Zealand

The Spenser Mountains is a topographic landform in the northern South Island of New Zealand. Located at the southern end of the Nelson Lakes National Park and north of the Lewis Pass they form a natural border between the Canterbury and Tasman regions. Several peaks are named after characters in Edmund Spenser’s allegorical poem, The Faerie Queene. Many of the early explorers were evidently literate men. For example, Frederick Weld (a surveyor) named Lake Tennyson; William Travers (a solicitor) named the Spensers and Faerie Queene; Julius Haast named Mt Una.

Within the range prominent peaks include Mount Una and Mount Humboldt.[1] The Spenser Mountains are the northern limit of the glaciers within the Southern Alps.[2]

Much of the forest cover is beech/podocarp with understory of a variety of ferns and shrubs; crown fern (Lomaria discolor) is one of the dominant understory ferns.[3]

See also

References

Notes and References

  1. Thomas Adolphus Bowden and James Hector. 1869
  2. Chinn, Trevor J.H., (1988), https://books.google.com/books?id=rgElAQAAIAAJ&dq=spenser+mountains+glaciers&pg=SL8-PA25, in Satellite image atlas of glaciers of the world, U.S. Geological Survey professional paper; 1386, .
  3. C. Michael Hogan. 2009