We present a sample of 42 high-mass low-metallicity outliers from the
mass--metallicity relation of star-forming galaxies. These galaxies have
stellar masses that span log(M_*/M_sun) ~9.4 to 11.1 and are offset from the
mass--metallicity relation by -0.3 to -0.85 dex in 12+log(O/H). In general,
they are extremely blue, have high star formation rates for their masses, and
are morphologically disturbed. Tidal interactions are expected to induce
large-scale gas inflow to the galaxies' central regions, and we find that these
galaxies' gas-phase oxygen abundances are consistent with large quantities of
low-metallicity gas from large galactocentric radii diluting the central
metal-rich gas. We conclude with implications for deducing gas-phase
metallicities of individual galaxies based solely on their luminosities,
specifically in the case of long gamma-ray burst host galaxies.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ; 11 pages, 11 figure