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Archaeological sites in Spain

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Zafarraya
Zafarraya is a municipality in the province of Granada, Spain, with a population of 2,200 (2003).
Rock Art of the Mediterranean Basin on the Iberian Peninsula
World Heritage Site in Spain
Estaca de Bares
cape and special area of conservation in Galicia, Spain
Cueva de La Pasiega
cultural property in Puente Viesgo, Spain
Cave of El Soplao
cave in Spain
talaiot
thumb|Talaiot in Capocorb Vell, Mallorca thumb|Talaiot at Son Serra, Mallorca thumb|Main entrance to Ses Païsses talaiotic settlement, Mallorca
Treasure of Guarrazar
archeological find composed of twenty-six votive crowns and gold crosses from a site in Guadamur, prov. of Toledo, Castilla-La Mancha, Spain
naveta
thumb|right|This is a naveta from the site of Naveta des Tudons found on the western end of Menorca 250px|right|thumb|Naveta des Tudons at dawn, Menorca A naveta (also known as funerary naveta or burial naveta) is a form of megalithic chamber tomb unique to the Balearic island of Menorca. They were built during the Bronze Age, between the Pre-Talayotic period and the beginning of the Talayotic period. Despite their resemblance to residential navetas, they served a very different function and do not share an entirely synchronous chronology.
Cave of Chufín
cave in Spain
Cave del Valle
cave in Spain
Juliobriga
thumb|right|280px|Partial view of the house of mosaics, Juliobriga Juliobriga (, , ) was the most important urban centre in Roman Cantabria, as stated by numerous Latin authors including Pliny the Elder. The site has traditionally been identified with ruins in the village of Retortillo (Cantabria) and its Villafría district, in the municipality of Campoo de Enmedio.
El Mirón Cave
cave in Ramales de la Victoria, Cantabria, Spain
Abric Romaní
archaeological site
Naviforme
thumb|Naviforme
Hipogeos de Biniai Nou
hypogeum in Maó-Mahón, Spain
Son Ferrer
human settlement in Calvià, Majorca, Balearic Islands, Spain
Sanisera
Sanisera was one of the Roman cities located in the island of Menorca (Balearic Islands, Spain), which was mentioned by Pliny the Elder in his book Naturalis Historia, III, 77–78 in the 1st century BC: