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Stone - Stone is to Pantescans as snow is to Eskimos. The islanders have been stacking stones for over 5,000 years and the 'muro alto' or high wall of the Neolithic village near Mursia (picture above) is still a standing witness of their craftsmanship. It's estimated that there are about 8,000km of stone walls on Pantelleria. Logically, the Pantescan dialect holds a wide variety of words for stone. A tartisa for example, is a little stone or a pebble; a ciampeddra a flat stone, used to fill narrow spaces when constructing the vaulted roof of a damuso and also applied in a very popular game for children. A mazzacàni, literally translated as 'dog killer', is round middle sized stone, and a strùmmulu is a irregularly shaped, useless stone. Strangely enough, the Pantescans also imported stone from other islands, like the cantùni, a boulder from Favignana and the balàta di Màuta, a slab of calcareous stone, coming from Malta.