This is the best-preserved prehistoric monument in the Municipality of Telti, although the analysis is rather complicated because of the abundant vegetation and, above all, the extensive collapses. Nowadays it is possible to catch a glimpse of an entrance, concealed by a large mastic tree, through which one enters a small circular buried chamber with a tholos roof that has a small opening to another chamber on the left. Opposite is the top of an additional small opening, which suggests that the original floor was lower than the one currently visible. Recently identified as being of “mixed type,” with the characteristics of corridor and tholos nuraghi. Externally, rows of stones can still be seen, which certainly constituted the wall face of the monument consisting of medium to large granite boulders, worked on the exterior side and arranged in more or less regular rows; the main entrance has not been identified but is assumed to be to the south as in most nuraghi. Subject of study and research by a number of distinguished scholars from the 1800s to the present day. These analyses have not been followed by any excavation work, so no scientific data is possessed to be able to date it exactly and attribute a certain function to it. It is placed between the Bronze Age and the Iron Age and can be assigned a residential and defensive use.