Background

The deposition of quartz as pore-filling cement and/or veins is a common diagenetic process during burial sedimentation, and can cause dramatic modifications of bulk-rock mechanics, including changes in stiffness (Laubach et al. 2004), consolidation behavior (Karig and Morgan 1994), and frictional properties (Lockner and Byerlee 1986). In sandstone reservoirs, quartz cementation starts at approximately 90°C (McBride 1989), whereas in shales, evidence of pore-filling cementation is rare, with mineralized veining being a much more common form of quartz deposition (van de Kamp 2008). The SiO2 deposited in sandstone cements is thought to be derived from pressure solution of detrital quartz and feldspar, although some studies emphasize the importance of external SiO2 sources, such as smectite-illite transformation (S-I) reactions in accompanying shales (Hower et al. 1976; van de Kamp 2008).

At subduction margins, incoming sedimentary deposits are buried along the plate boundary thrust. The underthrusting causes these sediments to undergo several diagenetic reactions during burial. These processes might have a first-order influence on the mechanical transition from aseismic shallower deformation to unstable seismic slip in deeper parts of the subduction zone (Moore and Saffer 2001); indeed, quartz cementation and/or veining have been invoked as a cause of the formation of seismogenic plate boundaries (Byrne 1998; Moore and Saffer 2001; Moore et al. 2007). A recent friction experiment by Saito et al. (2013) suggested that lithification of the plate boundary fault due to quartz deposition can also cause very-low-frequency earthquakes (VLFE) at shallow subduction zones (less than approximately 10-km depths; e.g., Ito and Obara 2006; Obana and Kodaira 2009; Ando et al. 2012; Sugioka et al. 2012). However, the origin, timing, and volume of this cementation and/or veining have yet to be documented in detail. In on-land accretionary complexes, quartz deposition has been documented in deformed rocks that underwent diagenesis at 100°C to 120°C (Moore and Allwardt 1980). Byrne (1998) suggested that pressure solution promotes quartz cementation in these types of environments. However, as the majority of plate boundary faults are located in smectite-rich horizons (Underwood 2007), the S-I reaction could also supply significant amounts of silica, although this factor has not been assessed in previous research.

In this study, we examined the behavior of mobilized SiO2 along the subduction zone plate interface by measuring the frequency and volumetric ratio of quartz-dominated mineralized veins present within an on-land accretionary complex of the Shimanto Belt (Mugi mélange), Japan. As a possible source for such veining, we focused on the diagenetic S-I reaction in the host-rock shales. For this purpose, bulk and clay fraction mineralogy was investigated by X-ray diffraction (XRD) analyses. We also modeled possible pathways of the S-I reaction by considering the underthrusting sediments in the Nankai margin as an analog setting. Based on these results, we detail the SiO2 behavior and its mechanical consequence on plate boundary faults in subduction zones.

Geological setting

The Shimanto accretionary complex on Shikoku Island, southwest Japan, is divided into northern and southern sub-belts (Figure 1; Taira et al. 1980). The Mugi mélange is exposed along the southeastern coast of Shikoku Island and is composed of six repeated thrust sheets (units 1 to 6) bounded by north-dipping thrusts (Shibata et al. 2008; Figure 1b,c). Each unit preserves the original ocean-floor trench stratigraphy, suggesting that the Mugi mélange was an underplated thrust-sheet package that was accreted beneath an ancient accretionary prism during the latest Cretaceous to earliest Paleocene (Onishi and Kimura 1995; Ikesawa et al. 2005; Kitamura et al. 2005; Shibata et al. 2008; Kimura et al. 2011). The Mugi mélange contains disrupted pillows and massive basalts, hemipelagic shale, pelagic red shale, and sandstone lenses enclosed in a sheared argillaceous matrix with scaly fabric (Figure 1b). A systematic deformation fabric is present within the mélange and has been related to underthrusting and underplating (Onishi and Kimura 1995; Ikesawa et al. 2005; Kitamura et al. 2005). Vitrinite reflectance analysis yields paleo-temperatures of 130°C to 150°C in the lower thrust sheets (Ikesawa et al. 2005) and > 200°C in the upper thrust sheets (Kitamura et al. 2005), corresponding to the approximate shallow portion of the seismogenic zone (150°C to 350°C; Hyndman 2007).

Figure 1
figure 1

Location of Mugi mélange (a), geological map of study area (b), and sampling locations for XRD (c). Modified after Shibata et al. 2008. OOST = out-of-sequence thrust. Vein occurrences were examined along the coastal traverse marked by a rectangle in (c).

Crack-fill veins are ubiquitous in the Mugi mélange (Figure 2a), and occur as two types: extensional cracks in the constricted parts of sandstone boudins (classified as 'vein I’ in Matsumura et al. (2003) or 'boudin neck veins’ in Yamaguchi et al. (2012)), and cracks along shear fabrics, such as Riedel and Y-surfaces ('vein II’ in Matsumura et al. (2003)). These veins are dominated by quartz, but abundant calcite veins are also observed, particularly near the basalt-derived fault zone (Ujiie et al. 2007; Yamaguchi et al. 2012). Heating and cooling experiments of fluid inclusions trapped in quartz veins suggest that these veins formed at temperatures of 125°C to 245°C and pressures of 92 to 145 MPa (Matsumura et al. 2003). Most of the veins appear to have precipitated during the maximum burial with deformation because vein-filling cracks are consistent with mélange fabric, and other faults related to the exhumation stage do not accompany the veins but are in many cases associated with unconsolidated gouges.

Figure 2
figure 2

Typical occurrence of mineralized veins (a) and variation in vein thickness (b), frequency, and cumulative thickness (c). (a) Mineralized veins within the Mugi mélange. (c) Measured at 1-m intervals along the transect line. Sampling locations for XRD are also shown.

Methods

Analysis of vein frequency and volumetric fraction

We examined the occurrence and distribution of mineralized veins hosted in deformed shales (vein II) along a transect that includes the entire section of unit 2 of the Mugi mélange from basal basalts to uppermost terrigenous sandstones (Figure 1c). We used a caliper to measure the thickness of every vein that intersected the transect line. Although our measurement was one-dimensional (1-D), the cumulative thickness of veins along the transect is almost equivalent to the volumetric fraction in bulk rock, because the transect runs almost perpendicular to the mélange foliation, and vein II mostly occurs parallel or slightly oblique to the foliation. Basalt-hosted veins were excluded from our analysis because it was not possible to discriminate between veins formed before subduction, associated with near-ridge fluid circulation, from those formed after subduction. When estimating the volume fraction, we also excluded veins in sedimentary horizons around the basal basalt, since Sr isotope analysis suggested that some of these veins have been influenced by dehydration of the basalt (Yamaguchi et al. 2012).

XRD analyses

We collected two shale samples (ML-01 and ML-02) from the study area (marked in Figure 1c). For bulk-rock analysis, rock chips were powdered in an agate mortar, and these powders were mounted on sample holders by side-loading to minimize the development of a preferred orientation of clay minerals. Bulk XRD patterns were obtained using a MAC Science MX-Labo with monochromatized CuK α radiation at 40 kV and 30 mA, with 1° divergence and anti-scattering slits, and a 0.15-mm receiving slit in continuous scan mode at a rate of 1°2θ per minute. Relative abundances of the constituent minerals (total clays, quartz, plagioclase, and calcite) were estimated by applying a normalization factor given by Underwood et al. (2003). However, the present analysis is not strictly quantitative because of the difference in experimental apparatus, and thus the data should be considered semi-quantitative.

Other chips were gently crushed and dispersed ultrasonically in distilled water; the clay fraction (< 2 μm) was then separated by centrifugation and soaked two times in 1 M CaCl2 solution (for more than 6 h in each treatment) to prepare Ca-saturated specimens. Suspensions of Ca-saturated specimens were dropped onto glass slides and dried in an oven at 60°C (air-dried, AD). These mounts were exposed to ethylene-glycol vapor at 60°C overnight (EG). XRD patterns for these mounts were recorded using a Rigaku Rint-2500 (Advanced Characterization Nanotechnology Platform, The University of Tokyo) with monochromatized CuK α radiation at 40 kV and 200 mA, with 0.5° divergence and anti-scattering slits, and a 0.3-mm receiving slit in continuous scan mode at a rate of 1°2θ per minute. Relative weight ratios for clay phases were estimated by applying a Biscaye's weighting factor (Biscaye 1965), which assumes a linear correlation between the peak area of the component and its abundance (1× for smectite, 4× for illite, and 2× for chlorite).

For decomposition of the 10-A peak profile, the samples were rescanned in step scan mode for 4 s every 0.02°2θ step, and obtained profiles were processed by DECOMPXR (Lanson 1997). A background was linearly interpolated from 6.5 to 10°2θ range and subtracted from the experimental pattern. Gaussian curves were composed to fit the original pattern without pattern smoothing. NEWMOD (Reynolds 1985) was used to calculate 1-D XRD patterns for mixed-layered clays.

Modeling of silica release along the plate interface during the S-I conversion reaction

We used kinetic modeling to quantitatively estimate the amount of SiO2 released during the S-I reaction, based on a general kinetic equation:

- dS dt = S a K Na b A exp - U / RT ,
(1)

where S is the percentage of smectite in S-I crystallites (%S); t is time in seconds; a and b are constants that describe the order of reaction; K and Na are the activities of potassium and sodium, respectively; A is the frequency factor; U is the activation energy for the reaction; T is the temperature (K); and R is the gas constant. Pytte and Reynolds (1989) derived an optimal parameter set for this reaction of a = 5, b = 1, A = 5.2 × 107 s-1, and U = 33 kcal/mol under the assumption that equilibrium between albite and K-feldspar controls the activity ratio between K and Na in the reacting fluid;

K Na = 74.2 exp - 2 , 490 T
(2)

The S-I reaction at the Nankai margin, as observed in several drilling holes (Steurer and Underwood 2003), was well reproduced by this kinetic expression (Saffer et al. 2008; Saffer and McKiernan 2009).

We consider the Muroto transect of the Nankai Trough as an analog setting of diagenesis for the Mugi mélange. Temperature-time history for the kinetic modeling is constructed using an underthrusting deposit at a rate of 4 cm/year in a geothermal structure modeled by Spinelli and Wang (2008). The numerical modeling of Spinelli and Wang (2008) examined the effect of fluid circulation in the upper oceanic crust on the subduction zone thermal condition, and provided two models for the Nankai margin: a cooler one with preferred hydrothermal circulation, and a warmer one with no fluid circulation. The temperature difference of the décollement between the two models at a landward distance of 100 km from the deformation front is approximately 70°C. In our kinetic calculation, we also adopted these two models in order to test how the subduction zone thermal model affects the progress of the illitization reaction. Equation 1 was solved numerically by the finite difference method. We used an S-I content value of 40 wt.% in the incoming deposit, and an initial state of 80%S at the trench of the Muroto transect (Saffer et al. 2008). A sensitivity test was also performed with respect to the plate convergence rate and initial state of %S.

Results

The veins hosted in the matrix shales of the Mugi mélange are < 1- to 12-mm thick, with most being < 1 mm (Figure 2b). Figure 2c shows the spatial variation in vein frequency (Matsumura et al. 2003) and cumulative thickness at 1-m intervals. Veins are concentrated within sedimentary horizons near the fault zone below the basalt (Matsumura et al. 2003), with this heterogeneity also apparent in the cumulative thickness distribution. In addition, vein density is lithology-dependent, with fewer veins in horizons containing abundant sandstone and siliceous shale lenses, and more frequent veining within homogeneous shales. In total, the mineralized veins occupy approximately 0.4 vol.% of the total amount of rock (bulk rock) along the transect. This value of volume fraction is comparable to the previous estimation for veins related to shear fabrics in the Yokonami mélange, which is another exhumed tectonic mélange in the Shimanto Belt, Shikoku (approximately 1 vol.%; Hashimoto et al. 2012).

Figure 3 shows the bulk-XRD pattern of ML-01, and relative mineral abundances calculated from the patterns are listed in Table 1. The two samples have almost the same mineral compositions, consisting of 50 wt.% of clays, 40 wt.% of quartz, 15 wt.% of plagioclase, and trace amounts of calcite.

Figure 3
figure 3

Bulk XRD pattern of ML-01 sample. chl, chlorite; cl, clay composite; q, quartz; p, plagioclase; and c, calcite. Reflections with an asterisk were used for semi-quantitative analysis of bulk rock compositions.

Table 1 Integrated peak intensities and calculated bulk rock mineral compositions

Figure 4 shows the clay-fraction XRD pattern (ML-01) in AD (lower) and EG (upper) states. The pattern shows basal reflections from chlorite (14.42 and 7.12 Å) and illite (approximately 10 Å), but the asymmetric profile of the 10-A band and its slight shift by EG solvation indicates the presence of an expandable S-I phase. Biscaye's factor yields approximately 3:7 for the weight ratio between chlorite and S-I (Table 1). The decomposition result suggests that the 10-Å S-I band is explained by four overlapping peaks at 10.8, 10.4, 10.0, and 9.9 Å (Figure 5; Table 2). The 10.4- and 10.0-Å peaks likely correspond to poorly crystallized and well-crystallized illite, respectively, that are commonly observed in late-stage diagenetic sedimentary basins (Lanson 1997; Lanson et al. 1998). However, it is uncertain whether the two peaks in our samples imply the occurrence of two distinct phases such as authigenic illite and detrital mica, or artificial interpretation of a single phase with a wide population of coherent scattering domain sizes (Lanson 1997). In addition to the peaks for discrete illite, the fitting procedure requires two more peaks at approximately 10.8 and approximately 9.9 Å in order to keep consistency with the interpretation of the AD profile. Based on the NEWMOD calculation, these peaks are ascribed to those for ordered (R = 3) S-I of approximately 10%S.

Figure 4
figure 4

XRD patterns for oriented mounts of clay-fraction specimen (ML-01) in air-dried (AD) and ethylene-glycolated (EG) states.

Figure 5
figure 5

Decomposition of 10-Å band in EG state. Two peaks for ordered S-I were introduced to consistently interpret both AD and EG profiles. PCI, poorly crystallized illite; WCI, well-crystallized illite.

Table 2 Results of peak decomposition for the I-S band

Figure 6a shows the results of calculations of S-I reactions in progress along the modeled transect (Nankai margin). The S-I reaction starts at around 70°C and continues up to temperatures of around 300°C. The two geothermal models do not significantly affect the modeling results (Figure 6a).

Figure 6
figure 6

Curves for calculated S-I reaction progress, release rate of SiO 2 , and sensitivity test results. (a) Calculated S-I reaction progress at plate interface along modeled thermal structures of Muroto transect with and without fluid flow (Spinelli and Wang 2008), indicating cumulative amounts of SiO2 loss during the reaction. (b) Release rate of SiO2 as a function of temperature. Results of sensitivity test for (c) plate convergence rate and (d) initial state of%S in S-I.

Discussions

Origin of SiO2 for mineralized veins

The majority of SiO2 in the veins observed along the transect is thought to have originated from pressure solution of detrital quartz and feldspar in deformed shales (Kawabata et al. 2007). Kawabata et al. (2007) determined the variation in whole-rock geochemistry of scaly shales in the Mugi mélange, and used a Ti-normalized isocon approach (Grant 1986) to estimate a total volume loss of 17 to 54 vol.% from the deformed mélanges during pressure solution deformation, the majority of which was fluid-mobile SiO2. However, this value represents a net volume reduction and should therefore also involve other sources, e.g., S-I or illite-muscovite reactions. In order to quantify the amount of SiO2 contributed to this volume loss by the various sources, we determined the amount of SiO2 removed by S-I reactions as follows.

Using end-member chemical formulae of smectite and illite, and assuming Al2O3 to be constant during the reaction, van de Kamp (2008) derived one example of reaction equation for illitization reaction;

1.308 Al 3.15 Mg 0.85 Si 8.00 O 20 OH 4 Na 0.85 2 H 2 O + 0.06 Fe 2 O 3 + 0.56 K 2 O + 0.02 CaO Al 4.12 Fe 0.1 Mg 0.56 Si 7.17 O 20 OH 4 K 1.47 Na 0.01 Ca 0.03 + 3.29 SiO 2 + 0.56 Na 2 O + 0.55 MgO + 3.23 H 2 O
(3)

This equation predicts that the S-I reaction yields 18 wt.% SiO2 from primary smectite. Boles and Franks (1979), using a different chemical composition, estimated a SiO2 loss of 23.3 wt.%, while Leder and Park (1986) suggested a loss as high as 28 wt.%. Above 200°C, the illite-muscovite conversion reaction will be enhanced and can liberate a further 17 to 23 wt.% of SiO2 from the original illite (van de Kamp 2008). Therefore, if one assumes a shale containing 50 wt.% smectite, the S-I reaction can potentially yield 9 to 14 wt.% of SiO2 from bulk sediments (18 to 28 wt.% of primary smectite) until the completion of the reaction.

At subduction margins, extensive research has quantified the mineralogy of incoming sediments (Underwood 2007). At the Nankai margin, smectite comprises some 20 to 50 wt.% of the bulk sediments within the Lower Shikoku Basin facies, which hosts the décollement-equivalent horizon, yielding a possible 4 to 14 wt.% of SiO2 mobilized by the S-I reaction.

Our XRD analyses show that the two shale samples have almost identical mineral compositions, containing approximately 35 wt.% of S-I, possibly as a product of a diagenetic reaction (Table 1). Considering previous reports on the relatively homogeneous nature of the matrix shale throughout the units (units I, II, and III; Ikesawa et al. 2005; Kawabata et al. 2007), the mineralogical properties shown here are thought to be representative of the whole units in this area. The weight fraction of 35 wt.% of S-I in the shale is almost equivalent to the smectite content in the Nankai sediments, and thus, comparable amounts of SiO2 (i.e., 4 to 14 wt.%) may have been released from the shales of the Mugi mélange. However, if we consider the net volume of SiO2 removed at temperatures of < 200°C, the isocon methods suggest a 35 wt.% loss of SiO2 from the original mudstone (Kawabata et al. 2007). This indicates that up to 40% of the total mass loss estimated by the isocon method was explained by S-I reactions, with the rest attributable to pressure solution of detrital quartz and feldspar. Liberation of as much as 14 wt.% SiO2 from the original mudstone is obviously enough to account for the observed quartz veining in the Mugi mélange, meaning that this excess SiO2 may have cemented associated sandstones, or may have left the system.

Moore and Allwardt (1980) suggested that incipient pressure solution occurs in exhumed accretionary complexes that undergo diagenesis at temperatures of 100°C to 120°C, with this process being dominant at temperatures above 200°C. Although the onset of pressure solution in the Mugi mélange has not been well constrained, pervasive pressure solution seams defined by dark cleavages are present in shales that were deformed at around 150°C (Kawabata et al. 2007). In contrast, the behavior of SiO2 mobilized during the S-I reaction can be more quantitatively assessed by kinetic modeling. Here, we reproduce S-I reaction pathways along the Nankai Trough plate interface as an analog setting for the Mugi mélange (Figure 6a). In these calculations, we assume that the initial content of smectite in the incoming deposit is 40 wt.%, and that 18 wt.% of SiO2 was liberated as a proportion of the original smectite until the end of the reaction. In addition to the results of calculations of the S-I reaction progress, Figure 6a also shows cumulative SiO2 liberation during this reaction. As the reaction proceeds, approximately 6 wt.% SiO2 is progressively released from the underthrusting deposit; Figure 6b shows the rate of SiO2 release as a function of temperature. This calculation demonstrates that the S-I reaction actively supplies SiO2 at temperatures of 70°C to 200°C, with the reaction continuing at higher temperatures. A sensitivity test indicates that the reaction temperature does not change significantly within the parameter ranges examined, while the reaction rate is highly dependent on variables such as the plate convergence rate and initial states of %S (Figure 6c,d). The temperature range for the active release of SiO2 is comparable to the estimated formation temperatures of quartz veins in the Mugi mélange (125°C to 245°C).

Comparison between kinetic prediction of S-I conversion and actual state of S-I in on-land samples

To check the validity of the kinetically predicted reaction progress of S-I conversion, the modeling results were compared with the mixed-layer S-I in the Mugi mélange. As mentioned earlier, the peak decomposition of approximately 10-Å reflection indicates that the S-I phase in the samples is ordered (R = 3) S-I of approximately 10%S. It is noted that 10%S of S-I is slightly lower than the kinetically expected value (15%S to 25%S; Figure 6a), considering the maximum paleotemperature of the Mugi mélange from vitrinite reflectance measurements (130°C to 150°C; Ikesawa et al. 2005).

Although the downhole progress of S-I conversion at the Nankai margin was successfully reproduced by the above kinetic expressions (Saffer et al. 2008), it is uncertain as to whether they are still applicable to modeling of diagenesis at great depths. In fact, K-feldspar was rarely detected by XRD in the analyzed shales, possibly because of completion of the albitization reactions of feldspars (Moore et al. 2007), and it is therefore probable that the activity ratio of K/Na in such conditions is controlled by other equilibrium states (e.g., albite-illite equilibrium). Moreover, deformation features such as mélange fabric and pervasive pressure solution cleavages are apparent in the analyzed samples. It has been inferred that the S-I reaction can be accelerated by deformation itself (e.g., Vrolijk and van der Pluijm 1999) and/or chemical anomaly of circulated fluids during deformation (e.g., Dellisanti et al. 2008). Although the sampling site of ML-01 is located in the vicinity of the basalt rock (at a distance of 5 m), close similarity of the two XRD patterns suggests that the S-I reaction may not have been affected by basalt-related deformation and/or fluids. However, both samples are involved in tectonic processes of mélange formation, and if these processes foster the rate of the conversion reaction, active SiO2 liberation will take place at a slightly lower temperature condition than the theoretical estimation.

Implications for seismogenesis at subduction zones

The liberation and deposition of SiO2 observed in the Mugi mélange provides insights into the mechanical evolution of the subduction zone plate interface, and has two specific consequences for seismogenesis. First, quartz cementation and/or veining cause progressive lithification of the décollement zone and may enhance velocity-weakening behavior (Byrne 1998; Moore and Saffer 2001). Frictional experiments indicate that quartz can cause a velocity-weakening response (e.g., Blanpied et al. 1995; Ikari et al. 2011; Saito et al. 2013), in contrast to the majority of clay minerals, which have velocity-strengthening behaviors (e.g., Saffer and Marone 2003; Ikari et al. 2011). As the original mudstone is dominated by clays, successive quartz infilling, particularly in cracks along the shear fabrics, is thought to be an important process that can lead to unstable slip. It is also noted that the timing and P-T condition of quartz veining in the Mugi mélange may be comparable to the source region of VLFE in the Nankai accretionary prism (Figure 7; e.g., Sugioka et al. Sugioka et al. 2012). Recently, friction experiments by Saito et al. (2013) demonstrated that a quartz-rich material is favorable for the occurrence of VLFE. They also suggested that a tectonic mélange lithified by quartz veining and cementation can be a source rock for VLFE. Hence, these diagenetic processes are thought to be intimately correlated to subduction zone seismogenesis.

Figure 7
figure 7

Schematic model of a subduction zone. Model indicates areas of quartz deposition and onset of décollement step-down into areas of oceanic basalt. VLFE (very-low-frequency earthquake) zone is from Obana and Kodaira (2009) and Sugioka et al. (2012). Mineralized veining may cause hardening of the underthrusting mélange, leading to the onset of seismogenesis such as VLFE and fracturing of the oceanic basalt (see text for details).

The second important aspect is an increase in the intrinsic frictional coefficient of the décollement, which may eventually lead to décollement step-down into the subducting oceanic basalt (Figure 7). Tectonic mélanges often include slabs or fragments of oceanic basalt, the presence of which can be explained by décollement step-down and subsequent underplating of the downgoing mélange, in addition to movement of the upper part of the basement into the overriding plate (Kimura and Ludden 1995; Kimura et al. 2011). Ikesawa et al. (2005) identified fault rocks such as cataclasites and ultracataclasites at the base of a section of incorporated basalt and argued that fracturing of basalt is a seismogenic process. The occurrence of high-velocity frictional slip on this fault has been also inferred from several lines of geological evidence, including a rapid injection of basalt-derived fluidized granular material during faulting (Ujiie et al. 2007), stretching of fluid inclusions in calcite by frictional heating (Ujiie et al. 2008), and progress of chloritization in fluidized rock due to frictional heating (Kameda et al. 2011). In addition, it is thought that sites of décollement step-down coincide with the upper aseismic-seismic transition (Matsumura et al. 2003), although the actual controls of this tectonic process are poorly understood. Progressive hardening by ongoing quartz veining and/or cementation is a possible process to increase the frictional strength of the sedimentary décollement by which fracturing can break through to relatively weak levels within the basalt (Figure 7). The initiation of active quartz deposition at temperatures of 100°C is consistent with the onset of décollement step-down at around 150°C.

Conclusion

This work examined the liberation and deposition processes of SiO2 in the deformed shale (the Mugi mélange in the Shimanto accretionary complex), which represents typical deformation features at subduction zone plate boundaries. XRD analysis of the rock and kinetic modeling suggest that the underthrusting of incoming sediments may rapidly foster S-I reactions to release SiO2 at temperatures from approximately 100°C. This condition is consistent with the formation temperatures of quartz veins inferred from fluid inclusion microthermometry. Moreover, the potential mass of SiO2 released during the reaction is large enough to account for the total volume of the veins in the analyzed transect. Progressive SiO2 deposition may be linked to plate boundary seismogenesis, including VLFE and décollement step-down into the oceanic basement during underplating.