The New Zealand
Ministry for Culture and Heritage gives a translation of "place of laughter" for
Ōkataina. According to traditional accounts the name was given by the
rangatira Te Rangitakaroro, who lived at Te Koutu, since he was once paralysed with laughter at a joke while sitting on a rock near the lake. The lake and surrounds were occupied by the
Ngāti Tarāwhai iwi. Te Koutu
Pā was located on the north-east shore of Lake Ōkataina. The carved entrance gate, is to be found in the
Auckland War Memorial Museum. Because of war raids before 1886, and flooding after 1886, the previous sites of occupation on the lake shore were abandoned by the
Māori Ngāti Tarāwhai inhabitants. Both a drowned Pā and shrine has been found. A palisade post found under water near Motuwhetero Island confirms that the older low lake level had been present for at least about 100 years before the 1886 eruption. Rock art in the form of a canoe in red ochre has been described. ==Ecology==