In March 2019, a series of seven
moa footprints were discovered in the Kyeburn River by Michael Johnston, a local tractor-driver. This was the first fossilised trackway known from the South Island; all previous finds were made in the North Island. Johnston alerted curator Kane Fleury at
Tūhura Otago Museum in Dunedin to the discovery. The river was diverted, and the footprints were removed to the museum. Study of the footprints published in 2023 revealed they were around 3.6 million years old, the second-oldest evidence of moa in New Zealand. They were likely made by a relative of the
heavy-footed moa around tall at the hip and weighing around , walking at . A single, faint footprint was made by a
giant moa with an estimated weight of . ==References==