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What Is Subduction?
by Andrew Alden
Subduction, Latin for "carried under," is a term used
for a specific type of plate interaction.
It happens when one lithospheric plate meets another — that is,
in convergent zones
— and the denser plate sinks down into the mantle.
How Subduction Happens
Continents are made up of rocks that are too buoyant to be
carried much farther than about 100 kilometers deep.
So when a continent meets a continent, no subduction occurs
(instead, the plates collide and thicken). True subduction happens only to
oceanic lithosphere.
When oceanic lithosphere meets
continental lithosphere, the continent always stays on top while the oceanic
plate subducts. When two oceanic plates meet, the older plate
subducts.
Oceanic lithosphere is formed hot and thin at mid-ocean ridges
and grows thick as more rock hardens underneath it.
As it moves away from the ridge, it cools. Rocks shrink as they
cool, so the plate becomes more dense and sits lower than younger, hotter
plates.
Therefore, when two plates meet, the younger, higher plate has
an edge and does not sink.
Oceanic plates do not float on the asthenosphere like ice on
water — they are more like sheets of paper on water, ready to sink as soon as
one edge can start the process. They are gravitationally unstable.
Once a plate begins to subduct, gravity takes over. A descending
plate is usually referred to as a "slab."
Where very old seafloor is being subducted, the slab falls
almost straight down, and where younger plates are being subducted, the slab
descends at a shallow angle.
Subduction, in the form of gravitational "slab pull,"
is thought to be the largest force driving plate tectonics.
At a certain depth, the high pressure turns the basalt in the
slab to a denser rock, eclogite (that is, a feldspar-pyroxene mixture
becomes garnet-pyroxene).
This makes the slab even more eager to descend.
It's a mistake to picture subduction as a sumo match, a battle
of plates in which the top plate forces the lower one down.
In many cases it's more like jiu-jitsu: the lower plate is
actively sinking as the bend along its front edge works backward (slab
rollback), so that the upper plate is actually sucked over the lower plate.
This explains why there are often zones of stretching, or
crustal extension, in the upper plate at subduction zones.
Ocean Trenches and Accretionary
Wedges
Where the subducting slab bends downward, a deep-sea trench
forms. The deepest of these is the Mariana Trench, at over 36,000 feet below
sea level.
Trenches capture a lot of sediment from nearby land masses, much
of which is carried down along with the slab.
In about half the world's trenches, some of that sediment is
instead scraped off. It remains on top as a wedge of material, known as an
accretionary wedge or prism, like snow in front of a plow.
Slowly, the trench is pushed offshore as the upper plate
grows.
Volcanoes, Earthquakes and the
Pacific Ring of Fire
Once subduction begins, the materials on top of the slab — sediments,
water, and delicate minerals — are carried down with it.
The water, thick with dissolved minerals, rises into the upper
plate. There, this chemically active fluid enters an energetic cycle of
volcanism and tectonic activity.
This process forms arc volcanism and is sometimes known as the
subduction factory. The rest of the slab keeps descending and leaves the realm
of plate tectonics.
Subduction also forms some of Earth's most powerful earthquakes.
Slabs normally subduct at a rate of a few centimeters per year,
but sometimes the crust may stick and cause strain. This stores potential
energy, which releases itself as an earthquake whenever the weakest point along
the fault ruptures.
Subduction earthquakes can be very powerful, as the faults they
occur along have a very large surface area to accumulate strain.
The Cascadia Subduction Zone off the coast of northwest North America,
for example, is over 600 miles long. A magnitude ~9 earthquake occurred along
this zone in 1700 AD, and seismologists think the area may see another one
soon.
Subduction-caused volcanism and earthquake activity occur
frequently along the outer edges of the Pacific Ocean in an area known as the
Pacific Ring of Fire.
In fact, this area has seen the eight most
powerful earthquakes ever recorded and is home to over 75
percent of the world's active and dormant volcanoes.
Edited
by Brooks
Mitchell
Andrew
Alden
Professional
geologist, writer, photographer, and geological tour guide
Thirty-seven
years of experience writing about geological subjects
Six
years as a research guide with U.S. Geological Survey (USGS)
Experience
Andrew
Alden is a former writer for ThoughtCo who contributed hundreds of
articles for more than 17 years. Andrew works as a geologist, writer, editor,
and photographer. He has written on geological subjects since 1981 and
participates actively in his field. For example, Andrew spent six years as a
research guide with the U.S.
Geological Survey, leading excursions on both land land and at sea. And
since 1992, he has hosted the earthquakes conference for the online discussion
platform, The Well, which began as a dialogue between the
writers and readers of the Whole Earth Review.
In
addition, Andrew is a longtime member of the member of the Geological Society of
America — an international society that serves members in
academia, government, and industry; and the American Geophysical Union — a community of
earth and space scientists that advances the power of science to ensure a
sustainable future.
Andrew
lives in Oakland, California; and though he writes about the whole planet
and beyond, Andrew finds his own city full of interest too and blogs about its
geology.
Education
Andrew
Alden holds a bachelor's (B.A.) degree in Earth Science from the
University of New Hampshire, College of Engineering and Physical Sciences, in
Durham, N.H.
Awards
and Publications
Andrew Alden on Earthquakes (The Well Group, Inc.,
2011)
Assessment of River — Floodplain Aquifer Interactions (Environmental
and Engineering Geoscience, 1997)
Andrew
Alden on Hosting (The Well Group, Inc., 1995)
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