English edit

Adjective edit

subductive (comparative more subductive, superlative most subductive)

  1. (geology) Of, related to, or caused by tectonic plate subduction
    • 1999, Peter Wilton Johnsont, Glyphs and Gallows: The Rock Art of Clo-oose and the Wreck of the John Bright, Heritage House Publishing, →ISBN, page 43:
      [Vancouver Island's] long, thin land mass was pushed up from the seabed to heights of over 7,000 feet by the relentless, subductive grinding of the Pacific Plate, which is slowly slipping beneath the continent upon which Canada stands.
    • 2000, Richard C. Selley, Applied Sedimentology, Academic Press, →ISBN, page 355:
      These typically occur in subductive troughs and it is apparent, both from their petrology and regional setting, that graywackes are often derived from the rising island arcs of volcanic origin.
    • 2009, S.B. Bhagwat, Foundation of Geology, Volume 1, Global Vision Publishing House, →ISBN, page 539:
      The proposed land-based subductive waste disposal method disposes of waste in a subduction zone accessed from land, and therefore is not prohibited by international agreement.
    • For more quotations using this term, see Citations:subductive.