“…Good quality seismic data allow interpreting the detailed geometry of diapirs and salt‐related minibasins even below allochthonous salt bodies [ Krzywiec , ; Ringenbach et al ., ; Hearon et al ., ], and the structure of the upper part of continental margins dominated by listric normal faults and hanging wall rollovers and rafts was typified. These salt tectonic concepts have led to the reinterpretation of odd structures in Alpine fold belts as potential salt‐related features in cases such as the Pyrenees [ McClay et al ., ; Canérot et al ., ], the SW Alps [ Graham et al ., ], the Central High Atlas [ Michard et al ., ; Saura et al ., ], and the Sivas Basin in Turkey [ Callot et al ., ] (Figure ). Within these settings, flaps or flap folds are understood as zones of upturned strata adjacent to a diapir, resulting from arching of the diapir roof above flanking strata [ Rowan et al ., ; Schultz Ela , ].…”