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Lucas Creek

Lucas Creek is a stream and tidal estuary of Upper Waitematā Harbour in the Auckland Region of New Zealand's North Island. It flows through Albany on the western North Shore, and enters the Upper Waitematā Harbour between Pāremoremo and Greenhithe.

Geography
Lucas Creek is an arm of the Upper Waitematā Harbour. The creek begins as a freshwater stream, flowing south-west from Fairview Heights, The Lucas Creek Waterfall is found on a section of the stream near Gills Road in Albany, After flowing through Albany, Lucas Creek is joined by the Ōteha Stream. After widening to a tidal inlet and passing the suburbs of Lucas Heights and Schnapper Rock, the creek is joined by a second tributary, Te Wharau Creek, at Greenhithe. The creek enters the Upper Waitematā Harbour between Pāremoremo and Greenhithe, opposite to Herald Island. Some sources describe the freshwater section as the Lucas Stream, and the estuary as the Lucas Creek. During the Last Glacial Maximum (known locally as the Ōtira Glaciation) when sea-levels were significantly lower, Lucas Creek was an entirely freshwater river that flowed into the Waitematā River (modern-day Upper Waitematā Harbour). Once sea levels rose between 12,000 and 7,000 years ago, the lower Lucas Creek was flooded, becoming an estuary. The first marine sediments are recorded as being deposited approximately 6,500 years ago. The Lucas Creek and wider Ōteha Valley area is predominantly formed from clay, The banks of the Lucas Creek were historically kauri-dominated forests. By the mid-19th century, the area had developed into a mānuka and fern-dominated scrubland. == History ==
History
Māori history The traditional Tāmaki Māori name for the creek was either ("Of Kahukura"), or ("Stream for Eating flounder") Māori settlement of the Auckland Region began around the 13th or 14th centuries. The North Shore was settled by Tāmaki Māori, including people descended from the Tainui migratory canoe and ancestors of figures such as Taikehu and Peretū. Many of the early Tāmaki Māori people of the North Shore identified as Ngā Oho, and the Lucas Creek has significance to modern iwi including Ngāti Manuhiri, The poor clay soils of the area were not suitable for Māori traditional gardening techniques, following the ridge line of Lonely Track Road. This included a kāinga called ("The House of Sleep Talking"), located at the southern headland at the mouth of Lucas Creek, at modern Greenhithe. Other permanently settled kāinga could be found near Te Wharau Creek, including , located at the Te Wharau Creek headland. During the early 1820s, most Māori of the North Shore fled for the Waikato or Northland due to the threat of war parties during the Musket Wars. When people returned in greater numbers to the Auckland Region in the mid-1830s, Te Kawerau ā Maki focused settlement at Te Henga / Bethells Beach. Early colonial era The first European visitors to Lucas Creek were predominantly kauri loggers in the early 1840s. Early maps variously labelled the creek as Clucas Creek, or Lucas Creek. Clucas and his wife left the area in 1846, having struggled to make a living in the isolated area. While the kauri logging industry finished early in the 1840s, gum digging soon after by itinerant diggers became a major industry, and one of the major camps in the area was established at Schnapper Rock on the banks of the Lucas Creek. The area also became known for illicit moonshine operations during the 1860s and 1870s, which led to the naming of one of the bays of the creek, Whisky Cove. By the 1850s, a village called Lucas Creek had begun to be established in the upper section of the creek (later renamed Albany in 1890), joined by a community established in the mid-1860s by Thomas and Mary Forgham, later known as Greenhithe. River transport along the Lucas Creek was the main transportation for Albany and Greenhithe in the 19th century. ==Gallery==
Gallery
File:Lucas Creek Waterfall.jpg|Lucas Creek Waterfall File:Yachts Moored at Lucas Creek 01.jpg|Yachts moored at the mouth of the Lucas Creek ==References==
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