Pureora Forest Park


![Remains of Phyllocladus trichomanoides (Tanekaha) were found at the subfossil forest discovered within the park in 1983.[12]](/uploads/202502/05/Tanekaha_Kahuroa3708.jpg)

Pureora Forest Park is a 78,000-hectare (190,000-acre) protected area in the North Island of New Zealand. Within its rich rain forest are an abundance of 1,000-year-old podocarp trees. It is "recognised as one of the finest rain forests in the world". Established in 1978, after a series of protests and tree sittings, the park is one of the largest intact tracts of native forest in the North Island and has high conservation value due to the variety of plant life and animal habitats available. New Zealand's largest totara tree is located nearby on private land.