On 29 June 2012, a cluster of four small debris flow landslides were reported to BGS on the northern slopes of Ben Reoch, south of Arrochar, Argyll and Bute. Geologists from the BGS Landslide Response Team carried out a survey on 10 July.
The exact date(s) of the landslide events is uncertain, but it is likely that the four events took place over the week of 21–28 June as a result of heavy rainfall during that period. The landslide flows did not reach the track and a railway at the bottom of this slope.
The failure appears to have occurred in saturated soil and head containing gravel and cobbles. It is probable that superficial deposits are thin and discontinuous on the hillside where the landslides have occurred. The soil and superficial deposits overlie the Beinn Bheula Schist Formation, metamorphic rocks of Neoproterozoic age.
These four debris flows are grouped together as National Landslide Database ID NLD 18678/1.

Four small scarps were inspected on Ben Reoch, forming the uppermost parts of the slope failures. The scarps were all narrow, under 10 m in width and concave downslope. Detachment of material occurred close to the bedrock surface at a depth of between 0.4 and 2 m.
Material has been removed between
10 and 20 m downslope. In LS1 bedrock is not exposed within the scarp but is estimated to be within 0.5 m of the surface.
Two of the scarps (LS2 and 3) have excavated material to a length of 20 and 30 m within what appears to have been narrow gullies. In LS4, 3 m of bedrock is exposed in the backscarp.
Below the backscarps, all four landslides have created debris flows whose tracks are marked by removed fern cover and smoothed grass, over which the debris has passed.
These pathways contain fragments of bedrock (schist and quartzite) up to small cobble size. Much of the finer-grained flow matrix is concentrated in the upper parts of the pathways, most commonly just below the base of the scarp or forming linear ridges along the pathway margins.
It appears that while rock fragments were transported in a slurry to the base of the pathways, much of the mud-rich debris was trapped on several benches or terraces that are present on the slope.

As a result of this, there are no depositional lobes at the bases of the pathways, which are marked by accumulations of loose vegetation carried downslope by the slurry.
Immediately below the gully that contains the backscarp to LS2, the debris pathways of LS1 and 2 coalesce on a bench to form one pathway up to 25 m in width. The pathways branch and thin downslope and are commonly in the region of 1m in width in their lower parts. Pathways can be followed as much as 400 m down slope.
