“…The CC is crosscut by N‐S striking normal faults, E‐W striking reverse faults, and some NW‐SE striking strike‐slip faults (Figure 2a; Allmendinger et al, 2005; González et al, 2003). Separating the Central Depression from the Coastal Cordillera on the west and the Precordillera on the east are the Atacama Fault Zone and the West Andean Thrust, respectively, accommodating some of the differential uplift between the physiographic domains (Armijo et al, 2015; González et al, 2003; Muñoz & Charrier, 1996; Muñoz & Sepulveda, 1992; Victor et al, 2004). Most of northern Chilean (e.g., Isacks, 1988; Jordan et al, 2010; Wörner et al, 2002) and Peruvian (2.5° northward; e.g., Schildgen et al, 2007) Western Cordilleran uplift, however, is thought to have occurred by way of a crustal‐scale monocline of which the Precordilleran slope constitutes the limb.…”