The Nuragic Bronze Age of Sardinia unfolds like a landscape of stone and sea: circular towers (nuraghi), coastal harbors and rocky inland refuges persist in the archaeological record. Sites included in this dataset—S'Orcu 'e Tueri (Perdasdefogu, NUO), Riparo sotto roccia Su Asedazzu and Su Cannisoni (Seulo, CA), Ingurtosu Mannu (Donori, CA) and Is Arutas (Cabras, OR)—date between 1532 and 922 BCE and belong to the long arc of Sardinian Bronze Age culture.
Archaeological data indicate continuity from earlier Neolithic and Copper Age communities: megalithic building traditions and local pottery styles evolve into distinct Nuragic material culture. The island's insularity promoted regional distinctiveness while maritime contacts with the western Mediterranean introduced new metals, styles, and possibly small-scale population movements. Limited evidence suggests these external interactions were episodic rather than large-scale population replacements. The material record—nuraghi foundations, fortifications, and rock-shelter assemblages—documents a society reorganizing around communal and defensive architecture, pastoralism, and burgeoning metallurgy.
While the archaeological narrative is robust, linking specific cultural shifts to discrete migrations remains challenging: chronology is improving, but many questions about the pace and direction of contact remain open.