The Dutch explorer
Abel Tasman was the first (known) European to come to New Zealand (
Aotearoa), which he named
Staten Landt, and he first encountered it on 13 December 1642. Tasman had 110 men under his command and was travelling with two ships, the
Heemskerck and the
Zeehaen. It is believed that the ships were off
Punakaiki and if so, it was the Paparoa Range that they saw. Significant
coal deposits have been found in the Paparoa Range, with the
Blackball Branch/Roa Incline and the
Rewanui Branch railways built to provide access to the mines. Although these
branch lines are now closed, they were famous for their usage of the
Fell mountain railway system to aid braking for trains descending the Inclines (though this was not a full use of the Fell system like the
North Island's
Rimutaka Incline). Some of the range is protected as the
Paparoa National Park, which was established in 1987. Within this park, the 1995
Cave Creek disaster occurred. Two Grey Valley residents, Trevor Johnston and Kevin Dash, became the first people to traverse the length of the Paparoa Ranges from north to south in mid-1986. They later wrote a book about the experience,
Touch the Wilderness. ==Flora and fauna==