At the foot of the rocky overhang known as Sa Corona Arrùbia (literally, the Red Crown), which watches over the surrounding low hills, right on top of one of them it is possible to admire the remains of the Nuragic Tomb of Sa Terra and Su Muru.
Recently investigated, albeit not definitively, it could prove to be a source of considerable surprises. At first glance it presents evident similarities with the nearby tombs of giants of Sa Sedda and Sa Caudela, such as the presence of the elongated gallery of the sepulchral corridor and the absence of the exedra, the sacred ritual space of devotion to the dead and ancestors, which suggest a date referable to the Middle Bronze Age (1600-1300 BC).
At the foot of the rocky overhang known as Sa Corona Arrùbia (literally, the Red Crown), which watches over the surrounding low hills, right on top of one of them it is possible to admire the remains of the Nuragic Tomb of Sa Terra and Su Muru.
Recently investigated, albeit not definitively, it could prove to be a source of considerable surprises. At first glance it presents evident similarities with the nearby tombs of giants of Sa Sedda and Sa Caudela, such as the presence of the elongated gallery of the sepulchral corridor and the absence of the exedra, the sacred ritual space of devotion to the dead and ancestors, which suggest a date referable to the Middle Bronze Age (1600-1300 BC).