The site opens as a fascinating treasure chest of ancient memories, where archaeological studies have uncovered oven-shaped tombs dating back to the Bronze Age and even finds from the 3rd millennium BC, hidden among the Mediterranean scrub. The burials, some featuring a perfectly preserved double oven, provide a rare insight into protohistoric funerary practices and the social organization of the agro-pastoral communities that inhabited this borderland between plains and hills.
Alongside the votive ovens, traces of huts and a small village emerge, in a landscape where the golden light of the sunset highlights the ruins and guides the gaze toward the nearby “Castidrazzu,” recently identified as the medieval castle of Sabuci. This stands as a testament to the historical stratification that saw these lands transition from the Roman provincial era to Norman and Aragonese rule.