Massive slips - some up to 100m high and 50m wide - have been discovered along the Utuhina Stream.
Back-to-back ex-tropical cyclones Debbie and Cook, and ongoing rain, created the perfect environment for the slips to occur at the Utuhina Stream headwaters.
Natural land dams were also formed and further rain carried the debris and soil downstream.
The slips have caused the Utuhina Stream to appear 'milky' which, according to Bay of Plenty Regional Council science manager Rob Donald , is perfectly safe for fishing and swimming and is a result of fine white material in the soil.
"The soil that caused the slips is from old lake bed sediments which formed thousands of years ago as deposits of pumice, organic material and diatoms (algae) on the bed of Lake Rotorua.