Giant megathrust earthquakes typically occur above the upper-plate Moho or the 350°C isotherm in warm subduction zones. However, large earthquakes also occur within the mantle wedge corner at 35-55 km depth at cold subduction zones, such as the Kermadec, Japan Trench, and Chilean margins. Here we investigate the frictional behavior of lawsonite blueschist metagreywacke, potentially found in cold subduction channels, to better understand the control of metamorphic grade on such first-order variations in seismogenic depth. We perform velocity-step experiments on metagreywacke gouge from room temperature to 500°C and effective normal stresses from 50 MPa to 320 MPa, capturing the unstable friction regime and the brittle-to-flow transition. The constitutive behavior of metagreywacke indicates a potential seismogenic behavior at high temperatures below the Moho. Large megathrust earthquakes in the mantle wedge corner may develop in the lawsonite blueschist metasediment channel of cold subduction slabs. This study finds that stable minerals at cold subduction zones enable large earthquakes in Earth’s upper mantle.
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Hao Zhang
University of Southern California
Sylvain Barbot
University of Southern California
zekang Yang
Institute of Geology, China Earthquake Administration
Nature Communications
University of Southern California
China Earthquake Administration
Institute of Geology, China Earthquake Administration
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Zhang et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69ba425c4e9516ffd37a283e — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-026-70315-4