“…Since the recognition of metamorphic core complexes in the Aegean region [ Lister et al , 1984; Buick and Holland , 1989; Avigad and Garfunkel , 1991; Gautier et al , 1993], many authors have equated exhumation with crustal thinning and suggested that all exhumation of metamorphic rocks was related to whole crustal extension in the Aegean region parallel to the roll‐back direction, especially because exhumation rates are much higher than can be reasonably accounted for by erosion [e.g., Forster and Lister , 2009]. However, Trotet et al [2001], Parra et al [2002], Jolivet et al [2003], Ring and Layer [2003] and later Ring and Glodny [2010] and Ring et al [2010]pointed out that particularly the exhumation history of HP‐LT metamorphic rocks may frequently occur in two stages. In a first stage, rocks typically exhume from their peak pressure conditions (of, e.g., ∼20 kbar for the Cycladic Blueschist [ Jolivet et al , 2003]) to lower crustal levels (e.g., ∼6–8 kbar [ Jolivet et al , 2003]) by return flow within the accretionary prism above the subducting slab.…”