Could that be a lightning strike?
I've seen a lot of different species with lightning damage all across the board figured I'd throw it out there. In the last couple weeks I've done a few lightning trees one was a cotton wood that just about completly blew the hell up completly covered the guys yard in thin strips of wood. The tree looked like it just went through a veneer machine every ring separated. Then you get the cotton wood that's been hit 10 times and don't show a single sign of it.It does look a bit like it, they tend to split the bark and sluff it off in thick barked trees... most notably Cottonwoods... and you get that long, split bark damage with sapwood exposed. The Silver Maple trees I've seen that were struck, almost always seem to throw the thin bark everywhere when the steam pressure rises during the strike. I mean, bark everywhere and lots of limb failure. I think this is more likely sun scald... multiple stems, almost entirely where the stems are exposed to sunlight. Could be any number of other things adding to the problem, of course. I've had sun scalded fruit trees develop secondary issues very quickly... bugs/fungi are very opportunistic.
That's still a good call, though... the damage is certainly very similar.
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