Abstract
Soon after the Kingdom of Italy declared war on the Austro-Hungarian Empire in May 1915, the hostilities in the high mountains of the Southern Alps began hesitantly and at once solidified to a fierce positional war. For territorial gains, both sides proceeded to a subsurface warfare in hard rock and glacier ice (mining war). Simple mining tools (hammer and chisel), as well as increased technical equipment (drilling by means of pneumatic and electric hammers and blasting) were applied to the mutual tunneling operations (galleries, counter galleries, galleries to locate enemy tunnels and caverns). Until 1918, a total of 34 peak positions were blown up. The impact of engineering geological factors on tunnel driving and blasting success is explained by selected examples (Lagazuoi, Col di Lana and Monte Sief, Marmolada, Monte Cimone and Pasubio).
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