15 pages Sous presse dans le: "Journal of South American Earth Sciences"A reappraisal of the “Late Cretaceous Yunguilla Formation” of the Cuenca area made it possible to define four distinct formations, correlatable with those of southwestern Ecuador. A mid to late Campanian marine transgression (Jadán Fm) is overlain by quartz-rich conglomerates of fan-delta to turbiditic fan environment (Quimas Fm) of latest Campanian-earliest Maastrichtian age, which are interpreted as evidence of the accretion of a first oceanic terrane (San Juan). Disconformable, arkosic turbidites and cherts (Tabacay Fm) of early Maastrichtian age are thought to represent the erosion of the newly accreted oceanic terrane. A major unconformity of late Maastrichtian age, caused by the accretion of a second oceanic terrane (Guaranda), is followed by the deposition of quartz-rich micaceous shelf sandstones (Saquisilí Fm) of Paleocene age. A third accretion event (late Paleocene) is recorded in coastal Ecuador. Each accretion event correlates with the uplift and erosion of the Eastern Cordillera, and with a sedimentary hiatus in the eastern areas. This suggests that in Ecuador, accretion of oceanic terranes contributed to the build-up of the Andes through tectonic underplating of low-density material, and that the eastern areas did not behave as a flexural foreland basins during late Cretaceous-Paleogene times