AbstractThe Mejillones Peninsula is thought to have one of the highest rates of tectonic uplift along the active convergent margin of northern Chile. We use exposure age dating from a flight of well-preserved marine terraces to determine the long-term tectonic history of the northern part of the Peninsula. Terrace ages suggest the area is comprised of discrete crustal blocks with differing uplift chronologies. Periods of uplift reaching rates of 0.60 ± 0.06 m/ka over the last ∼480 ka are recorded on one block, a value that is several-fold higher than is typical for the north Chilean coastline. Subsidence of an adjacent block is suggested by the anomalously old ages of terraces currently close to sea-level, and by observations of paleo-sea c...