“…Today, many studies use various forms of instantaneously formed sedimentary deposits or structures for qualitative and quantitative earthquake reconstructions in lacustrine systems during the Holocene, as long as the seismic origin of these deposits is clear. Most of these studies are concentrated in tectonically active regions such as the Alps (Beck et al, 1996;Schnellmann et al, 2002;Monecke et al, 2004;Nomade et al, 2005;Strasser et al, 2006Strasser et al, , 2013Wilhelm et al, 2015;Chapron et al, 2016), the Anatolian fault (Schwab et al, 2009;Avşar et al, 2014Avşar et al, , 2015 and around the Pacific where recurrent and large earthquakes have been recently experienced such as in Chile (Chapron et al, 2006;Bertrand et al, 2008;Moernaut et al, 2007Moernaut et al, , 2014, US western coast (Karlin et al, 2004;Maloney et al, 2013;Morey et al, 2013;Smith et al, 2013), Japan (Inouchi et al, 1996) or New Zealand (Howarth et al, 2014;Gomez et al, 2015). Moreover, recent limnogeological investigations in glacial lakes of the mid-continental North America underline the ability of sediment to archive earthquakes throughout the Holocene, despite the low to moderate magnitude of earthquakes that occurred in this intraplate domain (St-Onge et al, 2004;Doughty et al, 2014;Lajeunesse et al, in press;Locat et al, 2016).…”