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Home / Waikato News

New Māori words revealed at Geothermal Week

Milly Fullick
By Milly Fullick
Multimedia Journalist, Waikato·Taupo & Turangi Herald·
2 Aug, 2023 08:00 PM2 mins to read

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Aroha Campbell worked as part of the Waiwhatu Project to devise te reo Māori words for geothermal concepts. Photo / Amplify

Aroha Campbell worked as part of the Waiwhatu Project to devise te reo Māori words for geothermal concepts. Photo / Amplify

Spending too long in the bath can give you kūwhewhewhewhe.

Don’t worry, though, it’s not as bad as it sounds; kūwhewhewhewhe means “wrinkling of the skin” and is one of a handful of new words added to the Māori dictionary last week during New Zealand Geothermal Week 2023.

Geothermal workers from throughout New Zealand descended on Taupō last week for the steamiest of industry events.

Along with the latest information about the geothermal sector, delegates were some of the first to try out six new te reo Māori words to use in their everyday conversations about geothermal things.

The words were announced and gifted to the world by the Waiwhatu Project, a part of the Geothermal Next Generation programme led by Dr Isabelle Chambefort, of GNS Science.

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They were developed by a team comprising te reo Māori linguist Uenuku Fairhall, te taiao researcher Corey Ruha, Upflow’s geothermal expert Andy Blair, geologist Dr Paul Siratovich, and consultant Aroha Campbell QSM.

The intention behind the words was to identify and translate key concepts in geothermal energy.

These range from easy-to-understand ideas, like the wrinkled skin from spending a long time in a warm geothermal pool, to the complicated scientific concept of enthalpy, the total heat within a system.

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Campbell said the new words weren’t easily aligned with Māori systems of mātauranga (knowledge). Similarly, scientists can find it hard to understand and relate to Māori concepts and thinking.

“We came up with six words to bridge the gap between Western science and te reo Māori.”

“It’s about changing mindset.”

The te reo Māori words have already been put to the test in a place where the language is not often heard: Iceland.

Last year, researcher Ruha and five other Māori students attended a summer university in Iceland, taking the words with them as a way to test and communicate them in another culture.

They reasoned that many loan words from other languages are already used to describe geothermal concepts, from lahar, which comes from a Javanese word, to the Icelandic origins of geyser.

The next stage of the Waiwhatu Project is to get the words into social use, and then pass them to the next generation.

The six words and their meanings:

  • Kūwhewhewhewhe: wrinkling of the skin
  • Tokarewa: magma
  • Rangitoto: lava
  • Waiwhatu: geothermal fluid
  • Māpuna: reservoir
  • Ngaohū: enthalpy



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