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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
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Abstract
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Pressure
Regimes and
Pressure
Systems in the Adriatic Foredeep (Italy)
Chapter 9
Pressure
Regimes and
Pressure
Systems in the
Adriatic Foredeep (Italy)
Sandro Carlin Jacopo Dainelli
ENI-Agip E & P Division, Milan, Italy
Abstract
pressure
data. Abnormally high pressures in the area are mainly caused
by compaction disequilibrium resulting from the high sedimentation rate of the Pliocene to
Quaternary strata. The comparison of
pressure
profiles in the northern and central
Adriatic basins has shown the presence of five
pressure
regions. Three regions are present
in the post-Messinian siliciclastic succession that infills the Adriatic foredeep, and two
pressure
regions have been identified in the Cretaceous to Miocene carbonates of the
Apulian continental margin. The boundaries of these regions are coincident with the main
structural features of the Apenninic belt, indicating that the major thrusts act as
pressure
barriers. In the post-Messinian strata, the innermost region (with respect to
Apenninic vergence) includes the inner buried thrusts in front of the Apenninic chain.
This region is characterized by moderate to low overpressures,
hydrostatic
gradients, and
good lateral hydraulic continuity. In the second region, in proximity of the outermost
thrusts, overpressures are high and compartmentalization is pronounced. In the third
pressure
region, the undeformed foredeep of the Apennines, lateral hydraulic continuity
prevails and high overpressures are present in the two principal Pliocene depocenters (the
Romagna foredeep and the Pescara Basin). The fourth region, in the Cretaceous to Miocene
carbonates, includes strata involved in Apeninnic thrusting; it is characterized by
moderate overpressures. The fifth
pressure
region, in the foreland of the Apulian margin,
has
normal
pressure
conditions. Gas pools in the lower Pliocene interbedded
sandstone-shale sequence in the first
pressure
region are mostly found below regional
mudrock seals; whereas in the second and third
pressure
regions the overpressured shale
beds in the lower Pliocene provide excellent seals for the interbedded gas-bearing
sandstone reservoirs.
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