The museum is ethnographic and archaeological in nature: the archaeological section houses much of the excavated artifacts, found at the Santu Antine nuragic complex. The monument at different stages of the Middle Bronze and Iron Age is represented by a model; one room is used to display artifacts from the excavations of the fortress and some of the village huts. Prominent among the artifacts, from the Bronze Age and Imperial Roman periods, are limestone projectiles, eleventh-century smelter’s tongs, a fragment of a nuraghe model, and a small bronze sculpture depicting a small dog. The ancient settlement is illustrated with educational panels and photos of prehistoric monuments. One section is devoted to the Roman Age and the Middle Ages, with evidence from Logudoro-Meilogu. Roman milestones (3rd-4th centuries AD) are on display.