“…The Celebes Sea slab is visible down to ~150‐km depth along the Cotabato and Sulawesi trenches in cross sections AA′, BB′, and CC′ (Figures a–c), indicating a subduction duration of ~7 Myr assuming a constant convergence rate of ~35 mm/year and a low dip angle of ~35°, which is consistent with the Late Miocene to Pliocene age of the Cotabato Trench (Yumul et al, ). The Molucca Sea slab may have subducted down to ~650‐ and ~150‐km depths along the Sangihe and Halmahera trenches, respectively (Figures a, b, and d), in accordance with the previous tomographic results (Hall & Spakman, ; Huang et al, ). The high‐V anomalies associated with the subducted Philippine Sea slab are traceable to depths of 450, 550, and 600 km with an overturned dip angle in cross sections AA′, BB′, and CC′, respectively (Figures a–c), being consistent with the tomographic results of Fan et al ().…”