




Classified as a Historic Monument by decree on March 20, 1978, the Pouyol dolmen, also known as the Croix Ferrée dolmen, was first mentioned in 1821.
The slabs used in its construction are made of granite. The almond-shaped roof table is 3.20 m long and 2.50 m wide at its widest point. At the beginning of the 20th century, it rested on just three supports. The chamber is "piriform", i.e. pear-shaped, elongated and wider at the base than at the end. The surface of three of the supports has been regularized. According to Abbé Leclerc, the floor of the chamber was paved.
A salvage excavation and restoration in the early 1980s revealed the presence of wedging stones on the north side of the building, corresponding to vanished pillars. The discovery to the east of the building of an orthostate (standing stone) smaller than
The slabs used in its construction are made of granite. The almond-shaped roof table is 3.20 m long and 2.50 m wide at its widest point. At the beginning of the 20th century, it rested on just three supports. The chamber is "piriform", i.e. pear-shaped, elongated and wider at the base than at the end. The surface of three of the supports has been regularized. According to Abbé Leclerc, the floor of the chamber was paved.
A salvage excavation and restoration in the early 1980s revealed the presence of wedging stones on the north side of the building, corresponding to vanished pillars. The discovery to the east of the building of an orthostate (standing stone) smaller than