Earl Mountains were named by the explorersurveyor, James McKerrow after the Earl of Eglinton.
Much of New Zealand is dominated by volcanic mountains.
There is another "Zealand" in the Netherlands. I believe New Zealand was named after that part of The Netherlands.
New Zealand was originally named after the Netherlands province, Zeeland.
New Zealand is located at the southern hemisphere, so it's by the pacific ocean However; Zealand is a Danish island. Part of Copenhagen is on it. and ZEELAND (after which New Zealand is named) is in the Netherlands.
The volcanoes Tongariro, Ngauruhoe, and Ruapehu are the three mountains near Lake Taupo in New Zealand.
The Govenor of New Zealand, William Hobson, chose the area as his capital of the country and named it after George Eden the Earl of Auckland, then Viceroy of India. The town became New Zealand's capital in 1841
The Southern Alps
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.
New Zealand was named after Zeeland, a province. It was discovered and named by Abel Tasman
Neither. New Zealand is not in the tropics, but neither is it "in the mountains". New Zealand features many mountains, glaciers and a long line of alps, but its actual location is within the temperate zone.
Yes!!
Much of New Zealand is dominated by volcanic mountains.
John P Phillip named New Zealand New Zealand
The land in New Zealand is green pastures and very rugged mountains
There is another "Zealand" in the Netherlands. I believe New Zealand was named after that part of The Netherlands.
The mountains in New Zealand are plateau mountains
um well no country is flat. New Zealand has quite a lot of mountains