Aoraki is the name of Mt Cook.
There is no Cook Mountain in Australia. Mount Cook is on the South Island of New Zealand.
James Cook named Mt Egmont, New Zealand, in January 1770. He named the mountain after the second Earl of Egmont, a former First Lord of the Admiralty.
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Yes. There is a monument to Captain Cook in Hawaii. A white obelisk marks the point where he was killed by natives in 1779. There is also a statue of Captain Cook in St Kilda, Melbourne, the capital of Victoria, Australia. There are several monuments in the United Kingdom. One was built at The Vache in 1780, the year after Cook was killed. There is also a sizeable obelisk on Easby Moor which overlooks Cook's boyhood village of Great Ayton. In addition a plaque can be found on Free Trade Wharf in the Highway, Shadwell. In addition, there are numerous places named are Cook, such as New Zealand's Mt Cook as well as a Mt Cook on the border between Alaska as the Yukon; the Cook Strait; various small islands named Cook Island as well as the Cook Islands themselves; a Captain Cook Museum in Martin, UK, the village where he was born; Cooktown in far North Queensland, Australia; there is even a Cook cater on the Moon: these are just a few of the ways in which Cook has been immortalised.
Mt Cook - Aoraki
Aoraki..... often printed on modern maps as Aoraki/Mt Cook
The Maori word for goodbye is "haere rā."
Mt. Cook is taller at 12,316 feet, versus Mt. Olympus, at 9,570 feet tall.
The Maori name for Mt Cook is Aoraki.
Which Moari word do you need translated ? Not that I can speak Moari, but until you post the word you need....
on Mt. cook inglis have only 5 cookies with them
The Maori word for dictionary is "kupu pukapuka."
Mount Cook is 1526m higher than Mt Kosciusko!
i don't know it but it starts with n
Mt RuapehuAoraki Mt Cook (tallest)
Aoraki is another name for Mt Cook. :)