Police in Porto Torres have recovered an imperial roman women's head inside private premises, described as being a "fine item". Experts believe the item was stolen from a museum, as indicated by the presence of pedestal marks on its base. The bust was recovered as part of a batch of 71 items. The remains were recovered in two parts of the city and are ascribable to two distinct settlements. Nuragic remains (2000 BC) including millstones, pestles and farming tools which would seem to prove the presence of a large organised settlement, and are seen to bear the scars of industrial farming; a fact which is at odds with the area's being subject to heritage listing which in theory bars farmers from using the land. The second batch of remains were the marble friezes of a imperial roman temple, coins and tombstones.