All types of landslides occur in New Zealand. They are classified by there material and there movement. They can displace whole mountain sides, taking millions of cubic metres of material, at up to 200 kilometres per hour. The opposite of these are slow moving; only shifting a few centimetres a year. Landslides can produce a lot of river sediment. Most of the entering the rivers in New Zealand are caused by landslides. In March 1988, Cyclone Bola hit the East Coast. The landslides that started because of this produced over 20 million tonnes (64%) of the sediment of the Waipāoa River. However in the long term only 10-20% of the sediment in rivers in New Zealand is caused by landslides.
Green lake
The largest landslide ever recorded in New Zealand 13,000 years ago in Fiordland. Around 27 cubic kilometres of material collapsed in a hard rock landslide that covered an area of over 45 square kilometres. A whole chunk of the mountain range collapsed into the valley. Some depressions in the surface filled with water, forming sizable holes such as Green Lake, rather than the usual ponds.
New Zealand is a multiple hazard hotspot. Many of these make it a hotspot for landslides. Firstly the unstable slopes around the country already have bad pre-conditions that contribute.