Miners and mineral explorers are concerned at the
increasingly hostile environment being generated towards their industry and
their profession. There is little official or public recognition that the mining
industry is essential for the maintenance of the country's standard of living; a
large part of this hostile feeling is caused by the assumption that mining
destroys large tracts of our attractive countryside. This paper presents a
historic review of the impact on the countryside of the major land using groups
commencing with the Polynesian migration. European farming practices, subsequent
expansion of the urban dweller and the land management practices of the two
Government Departments, Lands and Survey and New Zealand Forest Service who
between them control half of the total land area, are discussed. Estimates of
total land area to date, directly and indirectly affected by mining have been
calculated and a broad estimate of 18 000 ha or 1/1500 of total land area is
indicated; current annual mineral production requires some 240 ha. These gross
areas take no account of subsequent land rehabilitation, its improvement upon
the original in some cases and the recreational, historic and aesthetic areas
gained. Comparisons are then drawn with some current land practices in New
Zealand.
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