The Naturalistic Museum of the Territory “G. Pusceddu ”(Sa Corona Arrubia) is the most important naturalistic museum in Sardinia. The permanent exhibition is divided into three pavilions, dedicated to fauna, botany and anthropology.
The Wildlife Pavilion offers a visit to eight large dioramas, the wonderful life-size three-dimensional reconstructions of the natural environments of the territory: a new way to discover, respect and love the nature that surrounds us through the scenographic representation of the fauna of Marmilla and Sardinia; an experience of high scientific value and great spectacle.
The Botanical Pavilion is in turn divided into three subsections: the Mycoteca, the Xiloteca and the Herbarium through which you can discover how a plant works, how a fruit is formed and many other secrets of the plant kingdom. Three-dimensional botanical drawings and models offer a different approach to the basic concepts of botany also represented in panels that illustrate the vegetation aspects typical of the territory.
The third Pavilion, the anthropic one, offers a path that allows you to reconstruct a concrete image of the history and culture of the area. It is divided into two parts: the first exhibits six suggestive scale reconstructions of the most important archaeological monuments of Marmilla; the second exhibits a collection of testimonies on the peasant civilization of the recent past.
The Naturalistic Museum of the Territory “G. Pusceddu ”(Sa Corona Arrubia) is the most important naturalistic museum in Sardinia. The permanent exhibition is divided into three pavilions, dedicated to fauna, botany and anthropology.
The Wildlife Pavilion offers a visit to eight large dioramas, the wonderful life-size three-dimensional reconstructions of the natural environments of the territory: a new way to discover, respect and love the nature that surrounds us through the scenographic representation of the fauna of Marmilla and Sardinia; an experience of high scientific value and great spectacle.
The Botanical Pavilion is in turn divided into three subsections: the Mycoteca, the Xiloteca and the Herbarium through which you can discover how a plant works, how a fruit is formed and many other secrets of the plant kingdom. Three-dimensional botanical drawings and models offer a different approach to the basic concepts of botany also represented in panels that illustrate the vegetation aspects typical of the territory.
The third Pavilion, the anthropic one, offers a path that allows you to reconstruct a concrete image of the history and culture of the area. It is divided into two parts: the first exhibits six suggestive scale reconstructions of the most important archaeological monuments of Marmilla; the second exhibits a collection of testimonies on the peasant civilization of the recent past.