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The Queen Charlotte plate boundary (QCPB), a transform separating the Pacific and North American plates, accommodates ~55 millimeters per year of motion, is a source of large earthquakes in the northeast Pacific, and may be a modern site of subduction initiation. The southern QCPB experiences oblique convergence, showcased by the 1949 magnitude (M) 8.1 strike-slip earthquake and the 2012M7.8 tsunamigenic thrust earthquake, both offshore Haida Gwaii, British Columbia. We present seismic reflection images of the southern QCPB, which constrain the crustal structure in unprecedented detail. The Queen Charlotte Terrace is underthrust by oceanic crust topped by a throughgoing, low-angle plate-boundary thrust, which ruptured in the 2012 earthquake. The Queen Charlotte Terrace is analogous to strain-partitioned, thin-skinned forearc slivers seen at oblique subduction zones, captured between a localized plate-boundary thrust and a mature strike-slip fault. Our imaging suggests that the system rapidly evolved from distributed to partitioned strain and is currently an incipient subduction zone.more » « lessFree, publicly-accessible full text available July 18, 2026
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Significance The exothermic metamorphic reaction in orthopyroxene (Opx), a major component of oceanic lithospheric mantle, is shown to trigger brittle failure in laboratory deformation experiments under conditions where garnet exsolution takes place. The reaction product is an extremely fine-grained material, forming narrow reaction zones that are mechanically weak, thereby facilitating macroscopic faulting. Oceanic subduction zones are characterized by two separate bands of seismicity, known as the double seismic zone. The upper band of seismicity, located in the oceanic crust, is well explained by dehydration-induced mechanical instability. Our newly discovered metamorphism-induced mechanical instability provides an alternative physical mechanism for earthquakes in the lower band of seismicity (located in the oceanic lithospheric mantle), with no requirement of hydration/dehydration processes.more » « less
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