Negative inversion and extensional reactivation of pre-existing compressive structures can occur at temporal scales ranging from seconds to millions of years. It may relate to multiple processes (e.g., Tari et al., 2023), spanning from local post-seismic stress reorganization (e.g., Hardebeck & Okada, 2018;Meneghini & Moore, 2007) up to the plate scale of the Wilson cycle, with opening of rift basins favored by the reactivation of inherited compressive structures (Wilson, 1966). In the actively deforming Apennine belt of Italy, the Eastward retreat of the subduction zone since the Oligocene led to thrusting and wedge accretion followed by crustal stretching associated with back-arc basins (e.g., Doglioni, 1991;Faccenna et al., 2004Faccenna et al., , 2014) (Figure 1a), whose delay and interplay is still matter of debate. Moreover, the geodynamic significance of extensional structures is debated. According to some authors, many extensional faults developed at shallow crustal levels before back-arc extension, due to gravitational re-equilibration of the upper portion of antiformal stacks during thrusting (e.g.,