• An article written by Bunn, Davies and Stewart, published in 2018, uses a novel "field of view" approach to navigate to the Pink and White Terraces locations.
  • The pink and white terraces were reportedly the largest silica sinter deposits on earth. They were once a dominant feature on the shores of Lake Rotomahana.
  • The beautiful Pink and White Terraces were considered to be the eighth wonder of the world before they were destroyed on the night of the Mt Tarawera eruption.
  • The cascading geothermal pink and white terraces of Aotearoa New Zealand were often referred to internationally and within New Zealand as the eighth wonder of...
  • When visiting missionaries and European traders saw the Pink and White Terraces, they were stunned by its size and appearance.
  • Prior to the volcanic eruption that wiped away the Pink and White terraces, the site was one of the most popular tourist attractions in New Zealand.
  • The Pink and White Terraces were only known to the outside world for forty-five years before they were lost forever.
  • The original Lake Rotomahana at the base of the mountain was “blown sky-high.” The Pink and White Terraces were thought lost forever.
  • The Pink and White terraces in New Zealand were the world's largest silica sinter deposits on Earth, until they were destroyed in the 1886 eruption of Mount...
  • ...there was a site so breathtaking, even compared to the rest of NZ, that it was spoken of as the 8th wonder of the world: the long-lost Pink and White Terraces.