St Andrea Island
The island is an important archaeological site, already in the nineteenth century there are reports of the presence of the ancients on this island, from 1987 to 1990 were found remains of pottery from the Roman era , the remains of a burial with the outfit.
St Andrea Island, the archaeological survey in three areas :
Zone A: on the north side of the island remains have been found dating back to the fifth-sixth century AD regarding huts , hearths , pits and a short distance to other parts of the walls of small buildings not yet precisely dated. Other remnants of walls have been found in the northern part of the island , dating around the beginning of the sixth century and the seventh century ; remains very likely to brick houses .
Zone B: in the southern part of the island have been found the remains of other stone buildings of varying size and composition associated with mortar which gradually replaced the wooden huts .
Zone C : the central part of the island was used as a necropolis initially and subsequently there was built above the Romanesque church of St. Andrew, later abandoned before the XVI -XVII century.
Other remains concern the First World War , various galleries in most parts of the island , seats carved into the rock , some plates with the name of the regiment location on the island of St Andrea island and others bearing the name island Clotide attempt Failed at that time.