By next spring there will be a new space created at the Archeological Museum in Calasparra to exhibit the discoveries at the Abrigos del Pozo.
The exhibition will include the most recent discoveries, fruit of recent excavations, two metres deep into the ground which are described as “slow and painstaking.”
These announcements were made at the recent lecture given by
Martínez Sánchez, Director of the excavations, at the Casa de Cultura.
She said the most important discovery had been the cave drawings which dated back 7,000 and commented that the traces of flora and fauna uncovered was almost the same as the current vegetation around and in the cave.
The majority of the artifacts found date back to the Neolithic age.
By next spring there will be a new space created at the Archeological Museum in Calasparra to exhibit the discoveries at the Abrigos del Pozo.
The exhibition will include the most recent discoveries, fruit of recent excavations, two metres deep into the ground which are described as “slow and painstaking.”
These announcements were made at the recent lecture given by
Martínez Sánchez, Director of the excavations, at the Casa de Cultura.
She said the most important discovery had been the cave drawings which dated back 7,000 and commented that the traces of flora and fauna uncovered was almost the same as the current vegetation around and in the cave.
The majority of the artifacts found date back to the Neolithic age.
