“…Furthermore, landslides that impound valleys and form lakes and/or become sediment‐filled serve as a secondary drivers of landscape evolution, potentially over long timescales (>10 4 year; e.g., Korup, 2004; Korup et al., 2006; Ouimet et al., 2007). Landslide dams locally store immense quantities of sediment that cover and armor bedrock channels (e.g., Hewitt, 1998; Korup et al., 2004; Lancaster & Grant, 2006), and upstream low‐gradient valley reaches foster ecological diversity and sequester organic carbon (Beeson et al., 2018; Bilby & Likens, 1980; Mackey et al., 2011; May et al., 2013). As a cascading hazard, when landslide dams become unstable, they often release large outburst floods (Costa & Schuster, 1988; Fan et al., 2019; Shang et al., 2003), making characterization of the timing and persistence of landslide dams critical for hazard mitigation.…”