Leader River landslide dam

BY KATE PEDLEY (UNIVERSITY OF CANTERBURY)
Accessibility: EASY
Delta formed and a smaller holding lake as the river finds a way! Photo K Pedley / UC
The 14 November 2016 Kaikōura Earthquake ruptured along over 21 different faults over the north eastern section of the South Island from the epicentre near Waiau, through to offshore Cape Campbell. The earthquake triggered over 10,000 landslides across the northeastern region of the South Island. The Leader River landslide dam is one of the larger landslides with approximately 6 million cubic metres of material damming the Leader River and forming Lake Rebekah.
Waterfalls and a new river path around the landslide. Photo K Pedley / UC
This rock slide/slump is predominantly within Greta Formation mudstone (including sandstone and siltstone), and the slide surface is assumed to be deep seated (about 80 m below the surface) with some rotation at the head scarp, possibly along bedding. A faulted contact between the Mesozoic aged Torlesse Supergroup and mudstone is also present in the landslide head scarp. Although there is no field evidence to suggest this contact ruptured, it is possible that a fault also ruptured through the source area of this landslide. The landslide is located around the junction of two ruptured faults, the Leader (coming up from the south), and the Humps fault (extending back west into the Waiau Basin and Emu Plains, and east around the front of Mt Stewart).

The geology here includes the Middle Miocene - Pliocene aged (around 2-15 million years old) Greta Formation. These deposits record near-shore marine and some coastal on-land environments as the local region was uplifted out of a shallowing ocean by the ongoing tectonic growth of the Southern Alps (due to tectonic plate collision of the Australian and Pacific plates).

The Mesozoic aged Torlesse Supergroup is one of the key basement rocks of the South Island and records a time of marine turbidite (from a type of underwater sediment gravity flow) deposits down the continental slope, off-shore the super-continent Gondwana.
Upper waterfall around the dam, Oct 2017. Photo K Pedley / UC
This is a fascinating place to observe how erosion processes shape the landscape and how water finds a way, especially as a response to a catastrophic event such as an earthquake. Since the river was dammed and Lake Rebekah formed as a result, the river has managed to erode it's way back down around the southern edge of the debris. Four waterfalls have been formed, a significant delta, and two smaller holding lakes. These features are constantly changing! Compare what you see on your visit in front of you with some of the past photos in this GeoTrip! Note also how the triangular shaped landslide scarp itself has weathered over time as loose material has been eroded off and the exposed rock textures more defined.

The Greta Formation is quite easily erodible, and this therefore means that the bulk of the dam material could likely be modified quite significantly over time. If you look at the upper waterfall you will notice a wooden structure that the landowners have constructed to divert water from the lake over the more resistant bedrock to slow down that erosion process.
Directions/Advisory

This site should be paired as a half or full day trip with the Wall of Waiau (see link), which is also on Woodchester Station. To get to the station turn-off drive approximately 12 km up the Leader Rd from SH1 at the road turn-off to Waiau just before the Leader River.
If coming from Waiau along the Leader Rd, the station entrance is also about 12 km up the road.
The Woodchester Station driveway is windy, narrow, gravel, and 6 km long through to the homestead.
If coming from Christchurch you should allow 2 hours one way travel to get to the homestead.
Make sure all farm gates are left as you find them!!!

Keep well back from the cliff edge of the river terrace!

Google Directions

Click here for Google driving directions

Accessibility: EASY

The dam overlook is directly north of the station homestead along the banks of the Leader River. The main farm track leads right up to it.

This is private land and a working highcountry station. Visits are for groups (not individuals) and by prior arrangement only – Please see link below for booking contacts at the facebook site. Groups of no less than 10 people are welcome with a fee of $10 per person for the day visit to the station, payable in person at the homestead when you arrive. School groups are also welcome by arrangement. The landowners, Dave and Rebekah Kelly, will give you instructions on where best to go and park your vehicle for each site.
This is a unique and amazing opportunity to see land evolution in action!

Features
Sedimentary Active Fault Landform Geohazard Active Erosion
Geological Age
Recent! This feature can be precisely dated at just after midnight on 14th November 2016.
Zealandia Evolution Sequence
Pākihi Supergoup: 5 million years ago – present
Links
The Wall of Waiau and Leader Landslide video (3m25s) https://youtu.be/KtE5W7s53Ak Drilling through the Leader Landslide video (10m4s) https://youtu.be/aIBW1gYz34g The Wall of Waiau GeoTrip: https://secure.geotrips.org.nz/trip.html?id=559&_=1517347524580 Woodchester Station on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Woodchester/ Key scientific publication (if you have institutional access) published March 27 2018 on the landslides: https://pubs.geoscienceworld.org/ssa/bssa/article/529881/landslides-triggered-by-the-14-november-2016-mw-7#.WrrHPxHmwMA.twitter. Publication summary on GNS website: https://www.gns.cri.nz/static/download/NHRP/NHRP_Kaikoura_Massey.pdf