The Polícia Judiciária said the body was found on a "vacant and very uneven lot".
"However, we think this is an argument for the Welsh government to provide an adequate level of funding, not for Amgueddfa Cymru to charge for access."Visitors gave a mixed response to the charge, with Deborah Clubb from Merthyr Tydfil saying: "I think [the fee] would make it something that I wouldn't visit as often, definitely, because it was always a free attraction before and something that you could do as a family without thinking about."
Mother-of-six Amy Hughes, from Aberdare, said she took the underground tour several times when it was free.She said: "[The admission fee] does make me not want to take all my kids down there but I do feel it's such good value to be able to go underground and see an actual mine."It would be good if they did a family ticket."
Savannah Knox, visiting from Southern Ontario, said she didn't mind paying because she is used to doing that back home in Canada.She said: "If it's historical or a museum it's usually charged. It helps with the upkeep, right?"
Showing her around Wales was Lauren Price from Risca, who said she didn't mind paying the fee "if the money's going back into keeping it up and going".
Amgueddfa Cymru said the Big Pit experience extends "far beyond" the underground tour, and the rest of the site remains free. It said it looks forward to continuing working with the Welsh government as they consider the report's findings.Shadow business secretary Andrew Griffith said: "Labour's botched negotiations have left businesses in limbo and this country simply cannot afford their continuing failure."
The prime minister has been warned he will fail to meet his own target of halving violence against women and girls without significant investment in services, according to two senior government watchdogs.This is the first time Domestic Abuse Commissioner for England and Wales Dame Nicole Jacobs and Victims Commissioner for England and Wales Baroness Newlove have written jointly to Sir Keir Starmer.
The pair said victim support services were being "pushed to the brink" by funding cuts and rising costs.The intervention comes ahead of the chancellor's spending review later this month, which is expected to feature cuts to some areas of public spending.