An open question in the behavior of metals subjected to shock is the nature of the deformation that couples to the phase transformation process. Experiments to date cannot discriminate between the role of known deformation processes such as twinning or dislocations accompanying a phase change, and modes that can become active only in extreme environments. We show that a deformation mode not present in static conditions plays a dominant role in mediating plastic behavior in hcp metals and determines the course of the transformation. Our molecular dynamics simulations for titanium demonstrate that the transformation is preceded by a 90°lattice reorientation of the parent, and the growth of the reoriented domains is accompanied by the collective action of dislocations and deformation twins. We suggest how diffraction and transmission electron microscopy experiments may validate our findings. Materials dynamics, particularly the behavior of solids under extreme compression, is a topic of broad scientific and technological interest [1][2][3][4][5]. The shock impulse provides a unique probe to excite and thereby examine the response of materials to dynamic compression. It is well known that if a material undergoes shock compression beyond the Hugoniot elastic limit, it exhibits rapid plastic flow which is expected to occur via the generation and propagation of defects (twin, dislocations, etc.) [1,[6][7][8][9][10], and possible phase transformations [11][12][13][14]. In the presence of large peak stresses, strain rates, and significant inelastic strain due to shock, these plastic deformation modes can differ from those observed under longer time scales or more quasistatic conditions [1,6], and may interact with the phase transformations [15,16]. However, when solids undergo phase transformations, a key question is how these deformation modes mediate the phase transformation process.The group-IV hexagonal-close-packed (hcp) metals Zr, Ti, and Hf, with transition temperatures and pressures that are relatively accessible, have served as an excellent test bed for studying aspects of deformation and phase transformation behavior under driven conditions. For the α (hcp) to ω (hexagonal) phase transformation, progress over the last three decades from recovery experiments and analysis of wave profiles [17][18][19] has largely focused on capturing the behavior of the equation of state, orientation relationships in microstructures, understanding the influence of impurities such as oxygen, and characterizing the deformation. A number of studies have recognized that the plastic flow behavior as a result of the transformation is accompanied by twinning and slip under different loading and temperature conditions [18][19][20]. However, recovered samples under shock have invariably been for polycrystals and the deformation modes of twinning and