International audienceDuring the Chile triple junction (CTJ) cruise (March–April 1997), EM12 bathymetry and seismic reflection data were collected in the vicinity of the Chile triple junction (45‐480S), where an active spreading ridge is being subducted beneath the Andean continental margin. Results show a continental margin development shaped by tectonic processes spanning a spectrum from subduction‐erosion to subduction‐accretion. The Andean continental margin and the Chile trench exhibit a strong segmentation which reflects the slab segmentation and the Chile triple junction migration. Three segments were identified along the Andean continental margin: the presubduction, the synsubduction, and the postsubduction segments, from north to s...
The Andean orogen is the most outstanding example of mountain building caused by the subduction of o...
The southern tip of South America off Chile has suffered a long phase of ocean-continent convergence...
International audienceThe Chile Triple Junction (CTJ) episodically migrated northward during the pas...
International audienceDuring the Chile triple junction (CTJ) cruise (March–April 1997), EM12 bathyme...
The Chile subduction zone, spanning more than 3500 km, provides a unique setting for studying, along...
The Chile Triple Junction (CTJ), an RTT-type triple junction located at 46°13′ S, 75°48′ W off the w...
International audienceThis paper aggregates the main basic data acquired along the Chile Triple Junc...
The Chile-Argentina Patagonian Cordillera is a natural laboratory to study the interactions between ...
The margin of South Central Chile (35° to 40° S) involves the subduction of the Nazca Plate beneath ...
International audienceThe Chile Triple junction is a natural laboratory to study the interactions be...
International audienceDuring the CTJ cruise, geophysical surveys were conducted between 45°S and 48°...
The active plate margin of South America is characterized by a frequent occurrence of large and deva...
The Andean orogen is the most outstanding example of mountain building caused by the subduction of o...
The southern tip of South America off Chile has suffered a long phase of ocean-continent convergence...
International audienceThe Chile Triple Junction (CTJ) episodically migrated northward during the pas...
International audienceDuring the Chile triple junction (CTJ) cruise (March–April 1997), EM12 bathyme...
The Chile subduction zone, spanning more than 3500 km, provides a unique setting for studying, along...
The Chile Triple Junction (CTJ), an RTT-type triple junction located at 46°13′ S, 75°48′ W off the w...
International audienceThis paper aggregates the main basic data acquired along the Chile Triple Junc...
The Chile-Argentina Patagonian Cordillera is a natural laboratory to study the interactions between ...
The margin of South Central Chile (35° to 40° S) involves the subduction of the Nazca Plate beneath ...
International audienceThe Chile Triple junction is a natural laboratory to study the interactions be...
International audienceDuring the CTJ cruise, geophysical surveys were conducted between 45°S and 48°...
The active plate margin of South America is characterized by a frequent occurrence of large and deva...
The Andean orogen is the most outstanding example of mountain building caused by the subduction of o...
The southern tip of South America off Chile has suffered a long phase of ocean-continent convergence...
International audienceThe Chile Triple Junction (CTJ) episodically migrated northward during the pas...