none3The Mediterranean we presently see is the result of a long geological history of rifting, spreading, subduction and collision of plates and microplates since the Mesozoic (Fig. 1). At the beginning of that time, a wide ocean, the Tethys, was encased between the continental masses of the Pangea, forming a large gulf, wedging to the west into this supercontinent. The subsequent geological history brings to the modern Mediterranean through the collision between African and Eurasian continents almost consuming all the former oceanic crust of the Tethys. Nowadays, it is possible to distinguish the Western Mediterranean from the Eastern, separated by the Sicily channel and characterized by different age and setting. The Eastern Mediterrane...