International audienceFluids are known to be a triggering and driving factor for landslides. Hydromechanical coupling has been proposed as possible explanation for landslide dynamics, including both slow, aseismic slip, as well as fast, seismic rupture. The widely accepted understanding is that rainfall, snowmelt and the seasonality of the groundwater recharge increases fluid pressures, which in turn reduces effective stress, and thus alters the strength of rocks and rupture surfaces, promoting sliding. So far, most interpretations focused on the effects of rainfall infiltration into landslides, and did not investigate in detail the role of groundwater table variations below the landslides on the rupture processes. However, such considerati...