During pre-European and early contact periods, Queen Charlotte Sound was important location for trade between North and South Island
Māori, including pakohe (
argillite stone) from nearby
D'Urville Island, which was used to create toki (
adzes). The local population gathered around the waters for its bountiful seafood. It was from a hill on
Arapaoa Island in 1770 that Captain
James Cook first saw the sea passage from the
Pacific Ocean to the
Tasman Sea, which was named Cook Strait. Captain Cook sheltered in Queen Charlotte Sound during each of his three voyages of exploration at various points, and named it after Queen Consort
Charlotte of Mecklenburg-Strelitz. The area was a base for whaling throughout the 19th and early 20th centuries, notably at Perano Head on Arapaoa Island. Queen Charlotte Sound has calm water and is popular for sailing - a marked contrast to the notorious waters of Cook Strait. Many ships have been wrecked close to the entrance to the Sound, most notably in recent years the Russian cruise liner
Mikhail Lermontov, which sank in 1986 in
Port Gore after striking rocks. One life was lost in the incident. ==See also==