“…It shows relatively minor seismicity (Chiarabba et al, 2005; Giardini et al, 1999) due to slow convergence between tectonic plates (Sánchez et al, 2018; Serpelloni et al, 2016). However, it is a key area to understand how deformation is partitioned at the transition between subduction zones with opposite polarities, as surface geology has been investigated for more than a century, seismicity has been continuously recorded since the 1960s (Amato et al, 1997; Eva et al, 2010), and the deep tectonic structure is increasingly well‐known thanks to recent geophysical investigations (e.g., Kästle et al, 2018; Salimbeni et al, 2018; Solarino et al, 2018; Zhao et al, 2015, 2020). Several kinematic models have been proposed to explain the postmetamorphic evolution of the Alpine region, either invoking horizontal indentation (e.g., Laubscher, 1988; Schmid et al, 2017; Tapponnier, 1977), microplate rotation (e.g., Ménard, 1988; Vialon, 1990), or synorogenic to postorogenic gravitational collapse (Eva et al, 1997; Eva & Solarino, 1998; Sue et al, 1999, 2007).…”