© 2015 EAGE www.firstbreak.org
71
special topic first break volume 33, June 2015
Earth Science for Energy and Environment
1
Spectrum.
*
Corresponding author, E-mail: neil.hodgson@spectrumasa.com
The Western Mediterranean: established
concepts and new insights
Paolo Esestime
1
, Richard Wrigley
1
and Neil Hodgson
1*
present a new interpretation of the
Western Mediterranean Basin. The new insights connect the evolution of the onshore and the
offshore areas, challenging the established basin model and the historic play concepts.
U
nderstanding the regional tectonic model of a basin is
essential to provide the framework for the structural,
sedimentary and thermal evolution, which are the
basis for defining the petroleum system. The revisit-
ing of accepted basin models is a good practice when new
data becomes available from seismic campaign and drilling
activity, allowing the interpretation to be finessed and more
consistent with wells and geological data from the outcrops.
The Western Mediterranean is a deep-water basin bounded
by several orogens active since the Late Cretaceous-Paleocene,
when the closure of the Tethys Ocean started (Stampfli et al.,
2002; Golonka, 2014). The Paleogene-Neogene subduction
and the collisional phases are responsible for the structural
setting of the circum-Mediterranean orogens and the distri-
bution of their allochthonous units, which are present in the
mountain ranges (Figure 1).
Figure 1 Schematic sketch showing the onshore and offshore regional structural trends reconstructed in this work. Offshore thrusts have been interpreted with
the help of the seismic data available. The white lines represent the interpreted seismic grid.