“…The relevance of Landscape Archaeology among Galician researchers (CRiado, 1989;CRiado and VilloCh, 1998), combined with the huge impact of foreign scholars doing fieldwork there (bRadley, 1997;bRadley, CRiado and FábRegas, 1994), has led to the production -from the 1980s onwards-of many studies exploring the distribution of mounds and petroglyphs across the region. In most of these approaches, prehistoric monuments have been interpreted as nodes connected to each other through routes retraceable by means of field work (CRiado and VilloCh, 2000), the analysis of mobility patterns of animals (inFante, VaqueRo and CRiado, 1992), the layout of historical routes (PaRCeRo, CRiado and santos,1998) and -in recent years-through the calculation of least-cost paths using GIS tools (CaRReRo-Pazos, beVan and lake, 2019; CaRReRo-Pazos et al, 2020;FábRega-álVaRez and PaRCeRo-oubiña, 2007;RodRíguez and FábRegas, 2015;RodRíguez-Rellán and FábRegas, 2017).…”