“…(Image: Google Earth) and fairly accurate date for the production of the minor topographic features a date determined by much counting of annual rings to lie between seventy-five and eighty-five or ninety years ago… More recently, landslide reconstructions started to include GD in annual growth-ring series of trees. The first dendrogeomorphic study of a landslide body dates back to Alestalo (1971), and similar field and laboratory approaches have been used ever since in North America (Shroder, 1978;Butler, 1979b;Reeder, 1979;Hupp, 1983;Jensen, 1983;Osterkamp et al, 1986;Bégin and Filion, 1988;Williams et al, 1992;Carrara and O'Neill, 2003). In Europe, dendrogeomorphic tools were introduced much later to assess the frequency and reactivation of landslides in the French Alps (Braam et al, 1987;Astrade et al, 1998;Lopez Saez et al, 2012a,b), the Italian Apennines (Fantucci and McCord, 1995;Fantucci and Sorriso-Valvo, 1999;Stefanini, 2004), the Spanish Pyrenees (Corominas and Moya, 1999), or the Ardennes (Belgium; Van Den Eeckhaut et al, 2009).…”