Islands_of_New_Zealand Islands_of_New_Zealand

Islands of New Zealand - Definition and Overview

New Zealand consists of a large number of islands. The two main islands, which are much larger than the rest and where most of the population lives, are the North Island and the South Island. The latter is often referred to as the "mainland", especially by its residents, despite it being only a little larger and having a lower population. Stewart Island is by far the biggest of the smaller islands, although Waiheke Island has the third largest population.

The following is a list of some of the islands of New Zealand:

Contents

Main New Zealand chain

Open sea islands

Islands in rivers and lakes

Outlying Islands

New Zealand also administers the following islands outside the main archipelago. Only the Chatham Islands have a permanent population. Others host visitors for science, conservation, meteorological observation and tourism.

The New Zealand sub-antarctic islands are considered World Heritage Sites.

Self-governing territories

The following self-governing island territories are politically dependent areas of New Zealand but are not considered part of New Zealand geographically:

Territorial claims

New Zealand also claims the Ross Dependency in Antarctica, including:

See other islands of the world.

Example Usage of Islands

shermanstravel1: Top 10 Great-Value Caribbean Islands - savor surf, sun & sand for less at these bargain beach locales. http://bit.ly/1B4rYx
jerrypass: Fiji has been booted out of the Pacific Islands forum http://cinegirlz.com/u/q8q
EdibleHawaiian: EDIBLE HAWAIIAN Islands: #ediblehawaiian Aloha Air Cargo and Hawaii Farm Bureau Partnership: http://bit.ly/lX8YM via @addthis
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