Registros del 1 al 10 de 18 encontrados |
1.- Active faulting and forearc block rotation in south-central Chile from GPS-derived deformation (36-39 degrees S) Copernicus GmbH on behalf of the European Geosciences Union (EGU); Katlenburg-Lindau; DEU; Germany, 2008 European Geosciences Union general assembly 2008 Ver registro
2.- Central and Southern Andean tectonic evolution inferred from arc magmatism Springer; Berlin; DEU; Federal Republic of Germany, 2006 The Andes; active subduction orogeny Ver registro
3.- Coastal deformation and great subduction earthquakes, Isla Santa Maria, Chile (37 degrees S) Geological Society of America (GSA); Boulder, CO; USA; United States, 2006 Ver registro
4.- Ecological implications of extreme events; footprints of the 2010 earthquake along the Chilean coast Public Library of Science; San Francisco, CA; USA; United States, 2012 Ver registro
5.- Estimating coseismic coastal uplift with an intertidal mussel; calibration for the 2010 Maule Chile earthquake (M (sub w) = 8.8) Elsevier;; III; International, 2012 Ver registro
6.- Fore-arc uplift rates deduced from sediment cores of two coastal lakes in south-central Chile Elsevier; Amsterdam; NLD; Netherlands, 2010 From the trench to the arc; subduction along South America Ver registro
7.- Holocene tectonic coastal uplift and tilting constrained through surface deformation on Santa Maria Island, south-central Chile active margin Geological Society of America (GSA); Boulder, CO; USA; United States, 2005 Geological Society of America, 2005 annual meeting Ver registro
8.- Incipient axial collapse of the Main Cordillera and strain partitioning gradient between the Central and Patagonian Andes, Lago Laja, Chile American Geophysical Union; Washington, DC; USA; United States, 2006 Ver registro
9.- Inversion of forearc basins in south-central Chile caused by rapid glacial age trench fill Geological Society of America (GSA); Boulder, CO; USA; United States, 2006 Ver registro
10.- Kinematic constraints on intra-arc shear and strain partitioning in the southern Andes between 38 degrees S and 42 degrees S latitude American Geophysical Union; Washington, DC; USA; United States, 2006 Ver registro
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