Not being identified as a Roman bridge until the 1980s, and having suffered considerable degradation, it was restored in 2019.
[1] The bridge, which crosses the Bolelas stream, is made of local limestone blocks.
On its south side is a section of a Roman path, about 50 meters long, which gives access to the bridge.
Close to the bridge archaeologists have identified vestiges of a Roman-era cemetery together with remains of a Neolithic settlement.
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