<p>Allometry refers to a physical principle in which geometric (and/or metabolic) characteristics of an object or organism are correlated to its size. Allometric scaling relationships typically manifest as power laws. In geomorphic contexts, scaling relationships are a quantitative signature of organisation, structure, or regularity in a landscape, even if the mechanistic processes responsible for creating such a pattern are unclear. Despite the ubiquity and variety of scaling relationships in physical landscapes, the emergence and development of these relationships tend to be difficult to observe – either because the spatial and/or temporal scales over which they evolve are so great, or because the conditions that drive them are so dangerous (e.g., an extreme hazard event). Here, we use a physical experiment to examine dynamic allometry in overwash morphology along a model coastal barrier. We document the emergence of a canonical scaling law for deposit (washover) length versus area. Comparing the experimental features, formed during a single forcing event, to four decades of change in real washover morphology from the Ria Formosa barrier system, in southern Portugal, we show that features forming at the event scale might exhibit a different pattern of change over longer time scales. This work reinforces the potential importance of initial conditions in landscape evolution, such that a landscape may reflect characteristics associated with an equilibrium or steady-state condition even when features within that landscape do not.</p>