2021
DOI: 10.1111/jpg.12800
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A New Regional Petroleum Systems Model for Central Italy and the Central Adriatic Sea Supported by Basin Modelling and an Analysis of Hydrocarbon Occurrences

Abstract: The petroleum system in Central Italy and the Adriatic Sea is of great interest for future hydrocarbon exploration. However, major uncertainties remain about key risk elements such as source rock spatial distribution and maturation history, the timing of hydrocarbon migration, and the nature of migration pathways. This paper presents a new regional‐scale petroleum systems model based on an integrated inter‐disciplinary study which includes public‐domain subsurface data on key petroleum systems elements, heat‐f… Show more

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Cited by 6 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…The existence of weak hyperbolas in ungrinded seismic images is interpreted as evidence of a damage zone with low porosity relative to the host rock [9]. Moreover, basin analysis modeling is highly important for understanding hydrocarbon migration in fault systems [10][11][12]. The influence of regional tectonics on the sequence division of the study area is a prominent consideration in basin hydrocarbon exploration.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The existence of weak hyperbolas in ungrinded seismic images is interpreted as evidence of a damage zone with low porosity relative to the host rock [9]. Moreover, basin analysis modeling is highly important for understanding hydrocarbon migration in fault systems [10][11][12]. The influence of regional tectonics on the sequence division of the study area is a prominent consideration in basin hydrocarbon exploration.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The majority of European hydrocarbon reserves (excluding Russia) is located in the North Sea region within the Northern Permian basin, where reservoirs ranging from Carboniferous to Tertiary are present, e.g., [8], although the Adriatic region also has a long exploration history concerning hydrocarbon potential, e.g., [9,10], France, e.g., [11,12], Spain, e.g., [13], Italy, e.g., [14,15], Vienna Basin, e.g., [16], the Carpathians and their foreland in Czech, Poland, Ukraine, and Romania, e.g., [17][18][19][20][21][22][23], Transylvania, e.g., [20,24], Eastern Ukraine, e.g., [25] and the Black Sea, e.g., [26]. In Poland, new small-or mediumsized gas and oil fields continue to be discovered (e.g., Brzyska Wola, Czarna Wieś, Olchowiec, Pniewy, Rogoźnica, Wielichowo W, Gnojnica gas fields with total reserves of ~5.8 BCM/206 BCF, and Połęcko oil and gas field of total reserves of gas ~2.3 MCM/81 MCF and oil ~12.3 kTOE/87.6 MBOE; all of them documented by the Polish Oil and Gas Company in 2019-2020 in the Carpathian Foredeep and Polish Lowland) [1,2], which suggests the existence of still-unexplored regions.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%