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Matemateāonga Range

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The Matemateāonga Range is a range of rugged hills in the northern Manawatū-Whanganui region of the western North Island of New Zealand . It is located on the western side the Whanganui River between Wanganui and Taumarunui .

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5-413: 39°26′S 174°31′E  /  39.433°S 174.517°E  / -39.433; 174.517 Starting in the late 1970s the then Department of Survey and Land Information embarked on a project to link Cape Egmont to East Cape by a walkway. The Matemateāonga Range section of the ‘Cape Egmont to East Cape’ walkway was completed in the 1970s. The Matemateāonga Range section still remains in use. It

10-451: A number of Statutory Boards which dealt the administration and management of land. In April 1987 the department was disestablished as part of significant restructuring of government administration. Its functions were split among three new government departments; the Department of Conservation , the Department of Survey and Land Information and Landcorp (a public company established under

15-471: Was a traditional Māori trail, then dray track in the early 20th century. This Manawatū-Whanganui geography article is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Department of Lands and Survey The Department of Lands and Survey was a government department in New Zealand that managed the administration of Crown land and its survey and mapping requirements. The department

20-684: Was established in 1876 with the appointment of John Turnbull Thomson as Surveyor-General . A major expansion took place in 1891 by combining the Department of the Surveyor-General and the Crown Lands Department into one agency. Its existence as an independent agency was consolidated with the passing of the Land Act 1892 . Although the two agencies had merged, operationally they functioned separately until 1913. The minister responsible, from 1891,

25-560: Was the Minister of Lands . The head of the department initially held the titles of both preceding agencies as the Surveyor-General and Under-Secretary for Lands until 1906. The former post was subsumed by the latter before being renamed Director-General of Lands in 1949. The Department of Lands and Survey main duties were administrating and managing Crown land (including walkways, national parks and reserves), surveying and mapping, land development and area planning. The department also administered

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