Santolaria, PabloGranado, PabloWilson, Elizabeth Parkerde Matteis, MarcoFerrer García, J. Oriol (José Oriol)Strauss, PhilippPelz, KlausKönig, M.Oteleanu, A.E.Roca i Abella, EduardMuñoz, J. A.2022-12-052022-12-052022-11-170278-7407https://hdl.handle.net/2445/191367Analog modeling is used to study the role played by the inherited salt-sediment architecture of a salt-bearing rifted margin, developed by minibasin downbuilding and margin-scale gliding, and then incorporated into a fold-and-thrust belt system influenced by surface processes. Inherited salt bodies localize contractional deformation at different scales and the salt-sediment architecture determines structural styles of fold-and-thrust belts. In our analog models, a large-transport thrust detached along allochthonous model salt (silicone polymer) accumulated in a former distal raft system. And the squeezing of salt walls, together with the tilting of minibasins, accounted for most of the shortening in a salt wall-minibasin province. Shortening and surface processes promote the extrusion and erosion of about 75% of the original model salt. The role played by salt tectonics during the contraction of salt-bearing rifted margins could be underestimated because of the low salt-sediment ratio found in fold-and-thrust belts. Our modeling results are compared with and assist in the interpretation of a section along the Northern Calcareous Alps.27 p.application/pdfengcc-by (c) Santolaria et al., 2022http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/es/Tectònica salinaGeologia estructuralTectonique du selStructural geologyFrom salt‐bearing rifted margins to fold‐and‐thrust belts. Insights from analog modeling and northern calcareous alps case studyinfo:eu-repo/semantics/article7269942022-12-05info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess