PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Revealing deformation mechanisms of the mineral antigorite in subduction zones

Researchers provide fundamental knowledge that underpins future efforts to understand earthquake phenomena

2026-02-06
(Press-News.org)

Earth’s surface is covered by more than a dozen tectonic plates, and in subduction zones around the world—including the Japanese Islands—plates converge and dense oceanic plates sink into the Earth’s interior. These regions, especially plate boundaries, are known for frequent seismic activity. In recent years, scientists have increasingly emphasized that water plays a crucial role in earthquake phenomena in subduction zones, and thus conducted active research to investigate the influence of water on various processes occurring within earthquake source regions.

When water is supplied, peridotite—the primary constituent of the upper mantle—can transform into serpentinite. This process is thought to occur extensively in the mantle wedge, the mantle region on the overriding-plate side above a subducting oceanic plate. The transformation of peridotite into serpentinite involves chemical reactions that alter the mineral assemblage of the rock. Since individual minerals have distinct physical properties, such as their deformability, serpentinization is expected to result in significant changes in the physical properties of the whole rock. However, while the deformation mechanisms of peridotite have been relatively studied over a long history of research, those of serpentinite are still under active investigation. As a result, serpentinite has become one of the key research targets for understanding the physical properties of plate boundaries in subduction zones.

Furthermore, it has been proposed that dislocation creep dominates deformation in antigorite, the main mineral of serpentinite. As deformation progresses, a crystallographic preferred orientation (CPO) develops, in which the crystal orientations become aligned. The deformation of antigorite by dislocation creep produces an “A-type” CPO pattern, in which the crystallographic a-axes of antigorite are preferentially aligned parallel to the shear direction. However, in addition to the A-type, multiple antigorite CPO patterns occur in nature, and the formation mechanisms of these different CPO patterns have not yet been fully understood. This discrepancy suggests that antigorite in the Earth’s interior may deform by mechanisms other than dislocation creep.

Motivated by this puzzle, a team of researchers, led by Associate Professor Takayoshi Nagaya from the Department of Earth Sciences, Waseda University, Japan, including Professor Simon R. Wallis from The University of Tokyo, Japan, has demonstrated that grain boundary sliding (GBS) can form the most common natural CPO pattern, known as the “B-type,” in which the crystallographic b-axes of antigorite are preferentially aligned parallel to the shear direction. Their findings have been published in Volume 13, Issue 4 of the Progress in Earth and Planetary Science journal on January 21, 2026.

In this study, the team used natural serpentinite samples collected from the Besshi and Shiraga areas in Shikoku, Japan, to investigate the deformation mechanisms of serpentinite at plate boundaries within the Earth’s interior. Their finding that antigorite deforms via GBS suggests that serpentinite deformation at plate boundaries is associated with aseismic slip that generates little to no seismic waves and does not produce felt earthquakes.

Nagaya and Wallis highlight the real-life implications of their fundamental work. “Our study improves methods for inferring how rocks deform to form shear zones, enabling a more advanced understanding of rock deformation mechanisms and contributing to insights into deformation processes and earthquake generation in the Earth’s interior, particularly in subduction zones.”

“Moreover, in recent years, slow earthquakes have attracted attention because of their potential links to great megathrust earthquakes. And our findings may help understand the relationship between slow earthquakes and large earthquakes from the standpoint of materials science,” concludes Nagaya.

 

***

 

Reference
Authors: Takayoshi Nagaya1 and Simon R. Wallis2
DOI: 10.1186/s40645-025-00790-8
Affiliations: 1Department of Earth Sciences, Waseda University
2Department of Earth and Planetary Science, The University of Tokyo     

 

About Waseda University
Located in the heart of Tokyo, Waseda University is a leading private research university that has long been dedicated to academic excellence, innovative research, and civic engagement at both the local and global levels since 1882. The University has produced many changemakers in its history, including eight prime ministers and many leaders in business, science and technology, literature, sports, and film. Waseda has strong collaborations with overseas research institutions and is committed to advancing cutting-edge research and developing leaders who can contribute to the resolution of complex, global social issues. The University has set a target of achieving a zero-carbon campus by 2032, in line with the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) adopted by the United Nations in 2015. 

To learn more about Waseda University, visit https://www.waseda.jp/top/en  



About Associate Professor Takayoshi Nagaya
Takayoshi Nagaya is an Associate Professor at the Department of Earth Sciences at Waseda University, Japan. He received a PhD degree from Nagoya University in 2016. His research interests include interior Earth materials science, structural geology, petrology, metamorphic rocks, serpentinite, mineral physics, solid Earth physics, structural seismology, subduction zone, upper mantle, continental crust, rock structure, and seismic anisotropy. He is a member of The Geological Society of Japan, Japan Association of Mineralogical Sciences, The Seismological Society of Japan, and Japan Geoscience Union.

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

I’m walking here! A new model maps foot traffic in New York City

2026-02-06
Early in the 1969 film “Midnight Cowboy,” Dustin Hoffman, playing the character of Ratso Rizzo, crosses a Manhattan street and angrily bangs on the hood of an encroaching taxi. Hoffman’s line — “I’m walking here!” — has since been repeated by thousands of New Yorkers. Where cars and people mix, tensions rise.  And yet, governments and planners across the U.S. haven’t thoroughly tracked where it is that cars and people mix. Officials have long measured vehicle traffic closely while largely ignoring pedestrian traffic. Now, an MIT research group has assembled a routable dataset of sidewalks, ...

AI model can read and diagnose a brain MRI in seconds

2026-02-06
An AI-powered model developed at University of Michigan can read a brain MRI and diagnose a person in seconds, a study suggests. The model detected neurological conditions with up to 97.5% accuracy and predicted how urgently a patient required treatment. Researchers say the first-of-its-kind technology could transform neuroimaging at health systems across the United States. The results are published in Nature Biomedical Engineering. “As the global demand for MRI rises and places significant strain our physicians and health systems, our AI model has potential to reduce burden by improving diagnosis and treatment with fast, accurate ...

Researchers boost perovskite solar cell performance via interface engineering

2026-02-06
Researchers from the Qingdao Institute of Bioenergy and Bioprocess Technology (QIBEBT) of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, in collaboration with international partners, have engineered a thin two-dimensional perovskite phase at the buried interface of three-dimensional (3D) perovskite solar cells (PSCs) to boost device performance and operational stability. The method, published in Nature Energy on February 6, improves the crystallization quality of perovskite films and reduces defect concentrations at the buried interfaces by more than 90 percent (a tenfold ...

‘Sticky coat’ boosts triple negative breast cancer’s ability to metastasize

2026-02-06
Researchers at Baylor College of Medicine have uncovered a strategy that triple negative breast cancer (TNBC) cells use to boost their ability to metastasize, or spread to other organs. Metastasis is the leading cause of cancer-related deaths and scientists are investigating ways to prevent it. These findings, published in Nature Communications, highlight new possibilities for developing clinical interventions to treat metastatic TNBC patients for whom there are no specific therapies. “Metastasis occurs ...

James Webb Space Telescope reveals an exceptional richness of organic molecules in one of the most infrared luminous galaxies in the local Universe

2026-02-06
A recent study, led by the Center for Astrobiology (CAB), CSIC-INTA and using modelling techniques developed at the University of Oxford, has uncovered an unprecedented richness of small organic molecules in the deeply obscured nucleus of a nearby galaxy, thanks to observations made with the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST). The work, published in Nature Astronomy, provides new insights into how complex organic molecules and carbon are processed in some of the most extreme environments in the Universe. The study focuses on IRAS 07251–0248, ...

The internet names a new deep-sea species, Senckenberg researchers select a scientific name from over 8,000 suggestions.

2026-02-06
The Senckenberg Ocean Species Alliance (SOSA), in partnership with the scientific publisher Pensoft Publishers and famous science YouTuber Ze Frank, have let the Internet name a newly discovered deep-sea chiton (a type of marine mollusk). The formal description of the species was published today in the open-access Biodiversity Data Journal. From over 8,000 name suggestions submitted via social media, the research team responsible for describing the species selected the name Ferreiraella populi. The specific epithet populi is a Latin singular noun in the genitive case meaning “of the people”. Curiously, the name was independently suggested by 11 different contributors ...

UT San Antonio-led research team discovers compound in 500-million-year-old fossils, shedding new light on Earth’s carbon cycle

2026-02-06
February 6, 2026 -- A UT San Antonio-led international research team has identified chitin, the primary organic component of modern crab shells and insect exoskeletons, in trilobite fossils more than 500 million years old, marking the first confirmed detection of the molecule in this extinct group. The findings, led by Elizabeth Bailey, assistant professor of earth and planetary sciences at UT San Antonio, offer new insight into fossil preservation and Earth’s long-term carbon cycle. Chitin is one of the most abundant organic polymers produced by life on Earth, second only to ...

Maternal perinatal depression may increase the risk of autistic-related traits in girls

2026-02-06
A research team from the Department of Psychiatry at Tohoku University, led by Dr. Zhiqian Yu and Professor Hiroaki Tomita, has uncovered compelling evidence that maternal perinatal depression - psychological distress occurring during pregnancy or postpartum - elevates the risk of autistic-related traits in toddlers, with a particularly strong impact on girls. Their findings are derived from a large-scale Japanese cohort of over 23,000 mother-child pairs (the Tohoku Medical Megabank Project Birth and Three-Generation Cohort Study) and supported by mouse ...

Study: Blocking a key protein may create novel form of stress in cancer cells and re-sensitize chemo-resistant tumors

2026-02-06
MIAMI, FLORIDA (Feb. 5, 2026) – Overcoming tumor resistance to chemotherapy drugs has long been a challenge for oncology clinicians and researchers. Now, a new study suggests that blocking a key protein, p300, may force damaged cancer cells into a state of uncontrolled transcriptional activity, thereby creating a novel form of cellular stress that can make even chemo-resistant tumors sensitive again to treatment. The study was led by researchers at Sylvester Comprehensive Cancer Center, part of the University of ...

HRT via skin is best treatment for low bone density in women whose periods have stopped due to anorexia or exercise, says study

2026-02-06
HRT via skin is best treatment for low bone density in women whose periods have stopped due to anorexia or exercise, says study Hormone replacement therapy applied via the skin is the best way of protecting bone density in women whose periods have stopped due to anorexia or intense exercise, according to new research from Imperial College London and Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust. The study, a meta-analysis of all previous clinical trials, identifies the most effective way to treat women with Functional Hypothalamic Amenorrhoea (FHA), where periods stop because of anorexia nervosa or intense exercise. FHA is a common reproductive disorder, accounting for almost a third of cases of ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Study finds Earth may have twice as many vertebrate species as previously thought

NYU Langone orthopedic surgeons present latest clinical findings and research at AAOS 2026

New journal highlights how artificial intelligence can help solve global environmental crises

Study identifies three diverging global AI pathways shaping the future of technology and governance

Machine learning advances non targeted detection of environmental pollutants

ACP advises all adults 75 or older get a protein subunit RSV vaccine

New study finds earliest evidence of big land predators hunting plant-eaters

Newer groundwater associated with higher risk of Parkinson’s disease

New study identifies growth hormone receptor as possible target to improve lung cancer treatment

Routine helps children adjust to school, but harsh parenting may undo benefits

IEEE honors Pitt’s Fang Peng with medal in power engineering

SwRI and the NPSS Consortium release new version of NPSS® software with improved functionality

Study identifies molecular cause of taste loss after COVID

Accounting for soil saturation enhances atmospheric river flood warnings

The research that got sick veterans treatment

Study finds that on-demand wage access boosts savings and financial engagement for low-wage workers

Antarctica has lost 10 times the size of Greater Los Angeles in ice over 30 years

Scared of spiders? The real horror story is a world without them

New study moves nanomedicine one step closer to better and safer drug delivery

Illinois team tests the costs, benefits of agrivoltaics across the Midwest

Highly stable self-rectifying memristor arrays: Enabling reliable neuromorphic computing via multi-state regulation

Composite superionic electrolytes for pressure-less solid-state batteries achieved by continuously perpendicularly aligned 2D pathways

Exploring why some people may prefer alcohol over other rewards

How expectations about artificial sweeteners may affect their taste

Ultrasound AI receives FDA De Novo clearance for delivery date AI technology

Amino acid residue-driven nanoparticle targeting of protein cavities beyond size complementarity

New AI algorithm enables scientific monitoring of "blue tears"

Insufficient sleep among US adolescents across behavioral risk groups

Long COVID and recovery among US adults

Trends in poverty and birth outcomes in the US

[Press-News.org] Revealing deformation mechanisms of the mineral antigorite in subduction zones
Researchers provide fundamental knowledge that underpins future efforts to understand earthquake phenomena