Māori names for soils
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Oneone means soil. Māori gardeners had at least 60 names for types of soil.
| Name | Description |
|---|---|
| One-pū | sand |
| One nui | rich soil, consisting of clay, sand and decayed organic material |
| One-matua | typically a loam |
| One mata | dark fertile soil |
| Tuatara wawata | brown friable fertile soil suitable for kūmara |
| One-pārakiwai | silt |
| One paraumu | very dark fertile soil, friable |
| One hanahana | Dark soil mixed with gravel or small stones |
| One haruru | Light but good soil; sand and loam |
| One hunga | sea sand, sandy beach, sometimes mixed with mud |
| One kopuru | soil found in wet situations |
| One kōkopu | gravel, or very gravelly soil |
| One kura | reddish, poor soil |
| One pākirikiri | soil containing gravel |
| One parahuhu | alluvium (also parahua) |
| One punga | light spongy soil |
| One tai | sandy soil, near tidal flats, near beach |
| One tea | white soil, sandy volcanic material |
| One takataka | friable soil |
| One tuatara | stiff brown soil, needing sand or gravel worked in |
| One wawata | lumpy soil |
| Kirikiri tuatara | fertile brown soil |
| Kōtae | alluvial soil |
| One tea | light sandy soil, near Dargaville. |
| Kenepuru | sandy silt |
| Kere was used as a prefix for some types of clay, including keretū, kerematua and kerewhenua: | |
| Keretū | clay |
| Kerematua | stiff clay |
| Kerewhenua | yellow clay |
| Kereone | sandy earth, e.g., near Morrinsville |
| Kōtore | white clay |
| Taioma | pipe clay |
| Uku | unctous clay, white or bluish |
| Uku whenua | plastic clay (old traditional name) |
| Matapaia | a clay when baked hard was used as a stone for cooking |