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In April 2000 a large-scale rock avalanche dammed the Yigong Zangpo River, forming an extensive rockslide-dammed lake. The impoundment lasted for 62days before a catastrophic breaching caused a massive outburst flood in the Yarlung Zangpo (Tibet) and the Dihang rivers (India) that travelled downstream to the main floodplain of the Brahmaputra in northeastern India. In response to discrepancies in the published literature on the event, we present a review and re-evaluation of the characteristics of the rock avalanche and associated landslide-dammed lake. We use digital topographical data (SRTM-3) and dynamic landslide modelling (DAN-W and DAN3D) to determine the salient characteristics of the damming landslide and to characterise its behaviour. Our analysis indicates that the volume of the damming rockslide was ca. 115Mm3, including 91Mm3 from the initial rockslope failure (bulked during disaggregation to 109Mm3) and 6Mm3 from entrainment during its 10.1km travel down Zhamulong gully. The debris travelled with an average velocity of 15–18m/s and resulted in a landslide dam on the Yigong River with a minimum height of about 55m. Using LANDSAT-7 imagery (obtained before, during, and after impoundment) in conjunction with an SRTM-3 DEM, we reproduced the filling of the lake. We determine that the landslide dam formed an extensive reservoir with an impounded volume of 2.015Gm3 and a maximum possible lake level of 2264masl (rounded to 2265masl). Our figures differ from those previously published but are believed to be well-constrained verifiable estimates of the volumes of the 2000 Yigong events. The outburst occurred after an attempt by army personnel to manually dig a spillway over the landslide debris and resulted in the entire volume of the lake draining in about 12h. The outburst flood travelled over 500km south into India, with a recorded rise in river level of 5.5m at the Pasighat gauging station, 462km downstream. In terms of historical outburst volumes from rockslide-dammed lakes, the volume of the 2000 Yigong event is only exceeded by that of the 1841 outburst flood from the Indus River rockslide-dammed lake, northern Pakistan.