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The Central and South-Central Andes form a two-sided mountain belt bounded by distinct zones of convergence in the western forearc and eastern foreland flanks. Previous geodetic studies of interseismic deformation in the Bolivian Subandes and the Argentine Precordillera found that the forearc to foreland velocity field decayed too slowly to be explained purely by elastic shortening driven by locking of the Nazca megathrust. The velocity field is more precisely explained if elastic deformation is augmented by eastward displacement of the entire Andes. Here, we extend the earlier interpretation of interseismic motion and argue that foreland dcollements can participate in the co- and postseismic phases of the earthquake deformation cycle associated with the Nazca megathrust. These findings have direct implications in estimating recurrence interval, slip rate, and probabilistic seismic hazard analysis on both sides of the orogen.
Figueroa et al. (Fri,) studied this question.
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