Rino
Ko rino (reo Hawaii: hao takea mai te kupu reo Marēo-Porinīhia i mua *paqet;[1] reo Rātini: ferrum, Fe) he pūmotu. Ko te taungota, 26; ko te Takiwā, 4; ko te Rōpū, 8.
Ko pūmotu kua whakaurua ki te mātau o te tangata whenua Aotearoa nō i hokohoko ngā whao ai te kahupapa Pākehā o Hēmi Kuki nō te tau 1770;[2] kei te mōhio hoki te tangata Māori i tēnei rawa mai te pūrongo o te hokohoko waenga te tāngata Tahiti (me te kupu Tahiti: fao[1]) me te ngā kauhoe o te waka Piritene HMS Dolphin i te tau 1767.[3][4]
Āhuatanga rongo
takatā- Taumaha ngota: 55.845 amu
- Mārō: 4.0
- Kiato: 7 874 kg/m3
- Kahakawe iahiko: 9.93 106/(m·Ω)
Ko ngā pūhui
takatā- Te tīra (me te waro, te konukōreko, te konukita, Vanadium, ...)
- Hematite (ferric oxide) (me te hāora): Fe2O3
- Magnetite (ferrous oxide) (me te hāora): Fe3O4
- Cementite (me te waro): Fe3C
Tirohia hoki
takatāTohutoro
takatā- ↑ 1.0 1.1 Malcolm Ross, Andrew Pawley & Meredith Osmond (1998). The Lexicon of Proto Oceanic: The culture and environment of ancestral Oceanic society. Pukapuka tua-1: Material Culture. Wh. 59. ISBN 0 85883 507 X.
- ↑ Isaacs, Nigel (2009). "Nails in New Zealand 1770 to 1910". Construction History 24: 83-101.
- ↑ Ian Smith (2020). Pākehā Settlements in a Māori World: New Zealand Archaeology 1769–1860. Bridget Williams Books. Ng. wh. 69-70. ISBN 0947492496.
- ↑ Daniel Gilfoyle (21 Hurae 2020). "The voyage of HMS Dolphin: The first Europeans on Tahiti". The National Archives UK.