Paul achieved his bachelor degree of Earth and Environmental Sciences in 2009 at the University of Caen Basse-Normandie (Caen, Normandy, France). Paul then moved to Brittany where he achieved master degree in Earth Sciences a the University of Rennes 1 (Rennes, Brittany, France). During this two years he i) performed a structural study of the Miocene basin of "St-Florent" (Corsica, France) and then ii) achieved a geomorphological study of the Orange river (South Africa/Namibia border) and surroundings to reconstruct the history of topographic growth around this main river of the South African Plateau. Astonished by the large flat areas of this plateau (i.e. Planation surfaces), Paul decided to investigate long-term evolution of landforms and reliefs. He carried out research about the geomorphological evolution of the Armorican Massif (Western France) since 200 Ma (on land and at sea) during his PhD thesis at the Geosciences Rennes laboratory (funded by the "Région Bretagne" and the BRGM – the French Geological Survey). His work about planation surface of the Armorican Massif and their relationships with associated sedimentary deposits allowed his coworkers and him to propose a model which enhance the main stages of Armorican landscape evolution since Jurassic times. After 2 years working as a Research and teaching assistant, Paul is hired as an Assistant Professor in the Department of Geosciences of the University of the Maine (Le Mans, France) and attached to the Laboratory of Planetology and Geodynamics (UMR 6112) where he is still interested on long-term landform evolution as well as surrounding basins record, especially in Western Europe and South America.