Katrina was trekking through Mount Ngauruhoe (Mt. Doom) in the North Island of New Zealand over the weekend. Check out the gorgeous photos!
Mount Ngauruhoe is an active stratovolcano or composite cone in New Zealand, made from layers of lava and tephra. It is the youngest vent in the Tongariro volcanic complex on the Central Plateau of the North Island, and first erupted about 2,500 years ago. Although seen by most as a volcano in its own right, it is technically a secondary cone of Mount Tongariro.
The volcano lies between the active volcanoes of Mount Tongariro to the north and Mount Ruapehu to the south, to the west of the Rangipo Desert 25 kilometres to the south of the southern shore of Lake Taupo.
The volcano was named by Nga-toro-i-rangi, an ancestor of the local Ma-ori iwi, Nga-ti Tu-wharetoa. Local traditions say that Nga-toro-i-rangi called volcanic fire from his homeland Hawaiki which eventually emerged at Ngauruhoe The name either commemorates his slave, who had died from the cold before the fire arrived,[3] or refers to the insertions (nga- uru) of his hoe (paddle-like staff) into the ground.