Located next to the Quesera de Zonzamas, we find a rock carving station consisting of two sectors, one with five panels and the other with one, totaling fourteen human foot silhouettes (podomorphs). Podomorphs are a type of rock engraving representing human footprints. It is believed that these silhouettes may have had a symbolic or religious significance for the island's ancient inhabitants.
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To the south of the rock carvings, there is another area with aboriginal archaeological material and some dry stone structures with a quadrangular shape, although with rounded corners.
About 50 meters from the Quesera de Zonzamas stands an effequén, a circular religious construction typical of Lanzarote and Fuerteventura. It consists of a circle of stones, and Sebastián Jiménez Sánchez identifies this structure as a tagoror, a traditional meeting or assembly place.