To explore controls on megathrust behavior and its connection with forearc deformation, we studied the Andreanof segment of the Aleutian Subduction Zone (offshore Alaska, USA), which has a simple geological history as a relatively young intra-oceanic subduction zone. Here, the forearc shows greater uplift and compression in the strongly coupled Adak region compared to the weakly coupled Atka region. Using multichannel seismic reflection data, we found that the incoming plate in both regions exhibits similar characteristics along the segment, suggesting that its properties do not account for the varying megathrust behavior and forearc deformation. Instead, differences between the Atka and Adak regions in the thickness of the methane hydrate stability zone, as marked by a bottom-simulating reflector, suggest more heat advection, and thus dewatering, in the Adak region, where the more developed fault network may enable fluid drainage, thereby lowering pore pressure at the megathrust and promoting coupling. Higher coupling allows for seismic and stress cycling that would sustain forearc permeability by faulting. Our results suggest a feedback between deformation and coupling that may be active or latent in other more complex subduction zones but in concert with or masked by other factors.
Read full abstract