“…To the north of the CTJ, the most obvious structure is the long-lived intra-arc Liquiñe-Ofqui fault zone (LOFZ, Hervé, 1976;Cembrano et al, 1996Cembrano et al, , 2000, which has accommodated an arc-parallel component of plate motion and controlled the emplacement of intrusions of the NPB (Hervé et al, 1993Pankhurst et al, 1992Pankhurst et al, , 1999Cembrano et al, 2002). Shaded relief digital elevation modeling (Rosenau et al, 2006), regional and structural fi eld mapping (Thiele et al, 1986;SERNAGEOMIN-BRGM, 1995 1 ;Diriason et al, 1998;Arancibia et al, 1999;Lavenu and Cembrano, 1999), microstructural analyses (Cembrano et al, 1996(Cembrano et al, , 2002Arancibia et al, 1999), and Ar/Ar laser-total fusion and step-heating geochronology of synkinematic minerals (Cembrano et al, , 2002López, 2001) in deformed plutonic rocks consistently demonstrate right-lateral transpression along the LOFZ in Late Miocene to Pliocene times. This interpretation is supported by apatite and zircon fi ssion track thermochronometric data collected along the southern Andes between 41° and 47°S, indicating an episode of enhanced cooling and denudation along the LOFZ in the Late Miocene to Pliocene (Thomson et al, 2001;Thomson, 2002;Adriasola et al, 2006).…”