http://www.auto-motor-und-sport.de/form ... 50495.html
AMuS has an interesting theory about the tyre failures. They remind us that similar things have happened to Michelin tyres in Spa 2004 and Indy 2005. They say that the failure mode at that time was the build up of a standing wave in the tyre shoulder. At that time the waves had also been induced by kerbs and Michelin used a steel belt in the shoulder.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Standing_wave

This is a standing wave of the first order on a disc geometry.

And this is a standing wave of the second order for the same geometry.
I find some plausibility in this explanation. A standing wave is something similar to what we know as resonance. If a dynamic system gets excited to oscillations that are not in the design calculation you do get stresses that massively exceed the design parameters.
Combined with the use of a hybrid construction from steel and Kevlar it could explain why we had different failure modes in Silverstone compared to prior delaminations. The resonance or standing wave frequencies would have been shifted by the different elastic and damping properties of the materials used. It could also explain why the use of Kevlar only in 2012 did not create any problems. Kevlar has superior damping and ductility properties compared to steel or hybrid.