In complex systems, composed from many atomic units, it is of equal importance to determine the time scales of dynamic processes and to have control at which atomic site a dynamic process was initiated. With resonant X-ray spectroscopic tools like autoionization and resonant inelastic X-ray scattering, an atomically localized excited state can be created and its dynamics monitored in comparison to the ultrafast time scale of the transient core-hole resonance. With this core-hole-clock method, charge transfer dynamics of only 320 +/- 90 attoseconds could be determined for Sulphur adsorbed on the Ru(0001) surface, extending the core-hole-clock method into the range of attoseconds. Exploiting the symmetry selection rules of resonant inelastic X-ray scattering, ultrafast atomic motion can also be investigated, which changes the molecular symmetry during a transient core-excited state. With this approach the vibrational dynamics of C2H4 on the time scale of a Carbon 1s core-hole resonance has been investigated.