“…They are characterized by different sizes, sedimentary environments (lacustrine, fluvial, alluvial), drainage conditions (exorheic/endorheic), structural setting, degree of dissection, and age of formation/infilling and extinction, depending on the local tectonic regime, sensitivity to the Quaternary climatic variations and, during the Holocene, by anthropogenic land-use changes as well (Amato et al, 2014;Amato, Aucelli, Bracone, Cesarano, & Rosskopf, 2017;Aucelli et al, 2011;Cavinato, Carusi, Dall'Asta, Miccadei, & Piacentini, 2002;D'Alessandro, Miccadei, & Piacentini, 2003;Galadini & Messina, 2004;Giaccio et al, 2013). Along the Apennine chain, the Molise sector is characterized by the presence of several Quaternary tectonic depressions (Venafro, Isernia, Carpino, Sessano, Boiano and Sepino intermontane basins) that have a NW-SE elongation and are filled by lacustrine-palustrine, fluvial-marshy, slope and alluvial fan deposits (Di Bucci, Naso, Corrado, & Villa, 2005;Aucelli, Cesarano, Di Paola, Filocamo, & Rosskopf, 2013, 2013, 2016Amato, Aucelli, Bracone, et al, 2017) (Figure 1). Among these, the Boiano Basin, the largest intermontane basin of the area, was recently investigated in order to investigate its tectonic and stratigraphic evolution (see Amato et al, 2014, Ferrarini et al, 2017 for recent reviews).…”