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Organic geochemical signatures of the Upper Miocene (Tortonian—Messinian) sedimentary succession onshore Crete Island, Greece: implications for hydrocarbon prospectivity

Maravelis Angelos, Kontakiotis, George, Bellas Spyridon, Antonarakou, Assimina, Botziolis Chrysanthos, Janjuhah Hammad Tariq, Makri Panayota, Moissette, Pierre, Cornée, Jean-Jacques, Pasadakis Nikos, Manoutsoglou Emmanouil, Zelilidis, Avraam, Karakitsios, Vassilis, 19..-

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URIhttp://purl.tuc.gr/dl/dias/C92F43F0-1CED-4EFB-9F54-9AB298B14D88-
Identifierhttps://doi.org/10.3390/jmse10091323-
Identifierhttps://www.mdpi.com/2077-1312/10/9/1323-
Languageen-
Extent16 pagesen
TitleOrganic geochemical signatures of the Upper Miocene (Tortonian—Messinian) sedimentary succession onshore Crete Island, Greece: implications for hydrocarbon prospectivityen
CreatorMaravelis Angelosen
CreatorKontakiotis, Georgeen
CreatorBellas Spyridonen
CreatorΜπελλας Σπυριδωνel
CreatorAntonarakou, Assiminaen
CreatorBotziolis Chrysanthosen
CreatorJanjuhah Hammad Tariqen
CreatorMakri Panayotaen
CreatorMoissette, Pierreen
CreatorCornée, Jean-Jacquesen
CreatorPasadakis Nikosen
CreatorΠασαδακης Νικοςel
CreatorManoutsoglou Emmanouilen
CreatorΜανουτσογλου Εμμανουηλel
CreatorZelilidis, Avraamen
CreatorKarakitsios, Vassilis, 19..-en
PublisherMDPIen
Content SummaryThe definition of pre-Messinian source rocks in the eastern Mediterranean is of paramount importance for hydrocarbon exploration because of the ability of salt to act as a high-quality seal rock. This research evaluates the organic geochemical features of the Upper Miocene (Tortonian—Messinian) sedimentary succession onshore Crete Island, Greece. The study employs original (Messinian, Agios Myron Fm) and published (Tortonian, Viannos Fm, Skinias Fm, Moulia Fm, and Messinian Ploutis section) results from organic geochemical analyses of mudstone samples. One hundred and one samples were examined using standard organic geochemistry methodology (Rock-Eval II and VI-TOC) to define the origin, type, and degree of organic matter maturity. The data indicate that the studied samples have poor to fair gas-prone source rock potential. These possible source rock units have not experienced great temperatures during burial, and, thus, their organic matter is thermally immature. The sub-salt (Tortonian—Messinian) source rock units are likely to be of higher thermal maturity in the western and eastern south Cretan trenches because of tectonic subsidence and a thicker sedimentary overburden. Several traps can grow in these regions, associated with normal faults, rotated blocks and unconformities (both below and above the unconformities). This research provides a basis for the further evaluation of the hydrocarbon potential in Crete Island. It is an area that shares geological similarities with the surrounding regions that contain proven reserves and is of crucial economic and strategic importance.en
Type of ItemPeer-Reviewed Journal Publicationen
Type of ItemΔημοσίευση σε Περιοδικό με Κριτέςel
Licensehttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/en
Date of Item2023-10-12-
Date of Publication2022-
SubjectRock Eval analysisen
SubjectPre-evaporitic source rocksen
SubjectHydrocarbon potentialen
SubjectSedimentary basin dynamicsen
SubjectThermal maturityen
SubjectKerogen typeen
SubjectHydrocarbon explorationen
SubjectEvaporites sealing qualityen
SubjectMessinian salinity crisisen
SubjectEastern Mediterraneanen
Bibliographic CitationA. G. Maravelis, G. Kontakiotis, S. Bellas, A. Antonarakou, C. Botziolis, H. T. Janjuhah, P. Makri, P. Moissette, J.-J. Cornée, N. Pasadakis, E. Manoutsoglou, A. Zelilidis and V. Karakitsios, “Organic geochemical signatures of the Upper Miocene (Tortonian—Messinian) sedimentary succession onshore Crete Island, Greece: implications for hydrocarbon prospectivity,” J. Mar. Sci. Eng., vol. 10, no. 9, Sep. 2022, doi: 10.3390/jmse10091323.en

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