International audienceVitreous slag wastes produced by a blast furnace working during the 16th century at the Glinet ironworks site (Normandy, France) are studied as analogs for vitrified nuclear waste. They display a specific interface between iron corrosion products and the glass matrix, which can contribute to understanding the influence of iron on glass alteration mechanisms and kinetics under anoxic conditions. Characterization of the archeological artifacts, especially of the interfacial area between the glass and corrosion products inside cracks, using micro and nanobeam techniques (micro-Raman spectroscopy, scanning electron microscopy, transmission electron micros-copy, scanning transmission X-ray microscopy) suggests that four mai...