The inhabitants left the place between 1960 and 1970 owing to the pressure induced by ICONA, the Spanish National Institute for Forestal recovery that had bought the land surrounding the villages.
[1] There were other factors as well, such as the abandonment of traditional agricultural practices like sheep and goat rearing, as well as the lifestyle changes that swept over rural Spain after General Franco's Stabilization Plan that pulled the local youth towards the cities and the coast.
[2] Most of Solana Valley's territory depends administratively from Fiscal, Sobrarbe comarca, Huesca Province.
[3] In Solana Valley there are numerous village churches and smaller religious buildings, such as the Iglesia de la Asunción and the exconjuratory in Burgasé, the Iglesia de Santa María in Muro de Solana, Santiago Church in Villamana and Saint Peter's Church in Gere.
The villages in the valley lie abandoned and the houses have fallen into disrepair and ruin: