The Comes Llobes de Pils Dolmen is a passage tomb with a short trapezoidal chamber and a narrow passageway made of dry-stone walls. It is built on land with a considerable northeast to southwest slope, forcing it to be entrenched by the capstone. Possible remains of a slab have been observed at the front. The front entrance has been preserved. Chronologically it can be dated back to the second half of the 4th millennium BC. At the end of the 19th century, Josep Antoni de Nouvilas spoke of a dolmen called “Comas Llobes de Pils” and several authors from the beginning of the 20th century also talk about it. The first person who wrote about it was Isidre Macau in 1934. In 1979, Josep Castells, Júlia Chinchilla, Josep Tarrús and Roser Vilardell excavated it and the Empordà Group for the Safeguarding and Study of Rural and Traditional Architecture (GESEART in its Catalan initials) restored it.
Gr11, 17754 Rabós, España
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