The final elaboration of this thesis is in a 1952 work of the Chilean admiral Rafael Santibáñez Escobar. It was based on scientific studies that showed a correlation between the characteristics of the waters of the southeastern Pacific Ocean and those bounded by the
Scotia Arc to the east and the
Drake Passage to the west, an area known as the
Scotia Sea and sometimes also as the Austral Zone Sea (the name that Argentina and Chile agreed to give to the maritime space of undefined limits to the south of the Big Island of Tierra del Fuego, which was the object of delimitation by the
Treaty of Peace and Friendship signed by both countries in 1984). Equivalences are presented in all the variables analyzed, showing similar attributes in biological (e.g. flora and marine fauna), geomorphological (e.g. depth, type, and form of substrates), and hydrographic (temperature, color, viscosity, density, and salinity). Regarding tides, those of the southwestern South Atlantic, such as
Río Grande on the
Big Island of Tierra del Fuego, are commonly of great tidal amplitude, of the order of and even more. On the other hand, in the area extending south and southwest from Cape San Diego, tides more closely correspond to the tidal regime of the southeastern South Pacific, which have little amplitude, arriving already from the coast in front of
Isla Picton at a difference of not more than . This occurs because the Scotia basin is always occupied by waters coming from the Pacific Ocean, because the morphological conformation of the extreme south of South America is inclined towards the southeast while the Antarctic Peninsula is inclined towards the northeast. Both emerged lands form an enormous funnel through which the
Antarctic Circumpolar Current flows, which transports the waters of the southeast Pacific to the southwest Atlantic from west to east. In the Drake Passage, a branch of this
current breaks off in an east-northeast direction, transporting the waters of the Pacific towards the
South Atlantic Current, which is formed from the
Atlantic current of Brazil, which flows from the northwest. The waters of the latter join with those originating in the Pacific, outside the Scotia Sea. Therefore, or so the argument goes, the formal delimitation between the South Pacific and South Atlantic oceans should not be a meridian like that of Cape Horn, but a natural division created by naturally occurring geomorphological features should be applied for their separation, changing the border from one created as a human convention to one delineated by nature itself. This new oceanic geographic limit would be mounted on the Scotia Arc, an oceanic volcanic arc and submarine mountain range that is in essence a sunken continuation of the
Andes mountain range and the
American Cordillera more generally, connecting to the Antarctic mountain range of the
Antarctandes. Geologically it is a young orographic system with strong volcanism and significant seismicity. The ridge of the Scotia Arc forms a pronounced arc of at least in length. It starts at the easternmost peaks of the
Isla de los Estados, continues along the
Burdwood Bank, and proceeds east to the archipelago called
South Antilles or Antartillas that includes the
Shag Rocks,
South Georgia, the
South Sandwich, the
South Orkneys and
South Shetland, to form the
Antarctic Peninsula. To the east, the boundary is formed by the abyssal
South Sandwich Trench, with depths of below sea level. The collision of
tectonic plates, such as the
South American,
Antarctic, and
Scotia plate, is what produces the folding of the
Earth's crust that originates this ridge. ==Political considerations==