“…After the study done by Pennington (1981), this Andean sector was considered as a proper microplate: the Northern Andean Block (NAB in Figure 1a), undergoing 0.6 cm/yr NNE‐ward (Trenkamp et al., 2002) independent drift with respect to nearby plates (Cediel et al., 2003; Egbue & Kellogg, 2010; Ramos, 2009). The boundary between South America and NAB is assumed to coincide with both regional dextral strike‐slip and reverse fault systems that extend from the Gulf of Guayaquil (Ecuador) to the gulf Triste (Venezuela), following main topographic ranges and changing strike and deformation style along their length (Figure 1; Baize et al., 2020; Egbue & Kellogg, 2010; Jiménez et al., 2014; Nocquet et al., 2014; Pousse‐Beltran et al., 2017; Trenkamp et al., 2002). Active seismicity along both types of faults has been recorded and inferred for historical time (e.g., Beauval et al., 2010; Dimate et al., 2003; Paris, 2000).…”