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Prehistoric Mines of Gava. The Gavà Mines, also known as Can Tintorer Mines, is a pre-historic archaeological site that occupies the Can Tintorer, Ferreres and Rocabruna areas in the municipality of Gavà (Baix Llobregat, Catalonia, Spain). [1] The site is under care of the Gavà Museum and the Gavà Mines Archaeological Park.
The Gavà Museum is located in the Lluc torre; a middle class family summer home built in 1799. The building has a multi-purpose room in the basement, temporary exhibition halls and an educational workshop on the ground floor, and the permanent exhibition Gavà, les veus del paisatge (Gavà, a landscape of voices) on the top floor.
Gavà museum. Gavà (Catalan pronunciation:) is a municipality in the Baix Llobregat comarca, in the province of Barcelona in Catalonia, Spain.It borders the coast of the Mediterranean Sea between Viladecans and Castelldefels.
Guduf-Gava language (also known as Gudupe, Afkabiye), an Afro-Asiatic language spoken in Borno State, Nigeria; Gavà Mines, also known as Can Tintorer Mines, a pre-historic (Neolithic) archaeological site in the municipality of Gavà, Spain
Several necropolises are known, as Camí de Can Grau, Mines de Gavà, Plà del Riu de les Marcetes, Bòbila Madurell, Can Gambús, etc. One (or infrequently two individuals) were found in this type of funeral register, although in the case of the Solsonian group we can find the reuse of the same chamber.
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Gava culture pottery from the Teleac hillfort, Romania. [1] The Gáva-Holigrady culture was a late Bronze Age culture of Eastern Slovakia, Western Ukraine (Zakarpats'ka Oblast and Dnister river basin), Northwestern Romania, Moldova, and Northeastern Hungary. It is considered a subtype of the Urnfield culture.