Abstract :
The actual route Hannibal followed during the invasion of Italia in the Second Punic War is one of the major questions of antiquity, one that
historians/archaeologists have long studied. There are six possible passes Hannibal could have used and one of the many bits of evidence in the
ancient literature that might help answer this question is the location of fired rock, the result of a conflagration Hannibal is reputed to have
employed to reduce the size of boulders in a two-tier blocking rockslide on the lee side (e.g. Italian) some distance down from the high col. The only
route with fired rock along the roadway leading to the Po River Valley or the Dora Riparia is below the Col du Clapier, one of the possible northern
routes. ToF-SIMS investigation of the 100-mm thick burned crust in hornblende schist interlaced with veins of quartz-feldspathic minerals yields
various elements C, Mg, Na, Ca, Si, Ti, P, Al, Fe and their associated fragments. Hydrocarbon fragments are thought to be products of combustion
whereas Ca and Na along with Mg–Fe silicates are derived from the country rock. Aeolian components along with clay minerals settled onto rock
surfaces following firing. While the SIMS data clearly would not provide an age for the burnt rock, compositional evidence of the conflagration
may relate to Hannibal’s actual route.
Keywords :
historical archaeology , Hannibal , Alps , ToF-SIMS , Fired rock