Battered limestone cliffs around Ciutadella hide chambers where Late Bronze Age people laid their dead. At Es Forat de ses Aritges, archaeological stratigraphy and radiocarbon contexts place human activity firmly in the span 1200–1000 BCE, a time when seafaring communities in the western Mediterranean negotiated long-distance exchange, new metal technologies, and shifting social ties.
Material culture from Menorca in this era is fragmentary but evocative: modest bronze tools, local pottery with islander styles, and funerary deposition in natural caves. These traces suggest small, tightly knit groups adapted to island resources—sheep, goats, coastal fishing and opportunistic trade. The island’s geographic isolation produced cultural trajectories that both absorbed and resisted broader Iberian Late Bronze Age influences.
Archaeological data indicates continuity with earlier Balearic traditions alongside novel elements that may reflect contacts with mainland Iberia and other Mediterranean communities. Limited evidence suggests these contact networks were episodic rather than colonizing: goods and ideas traveled, people less frequently did. Crucially, the aDNA samples from Es Forat de ses Aritges give a direct, if preliminary, glimpse into the biological make-up of these islanders, helping tether material culture to ancestry and mobility patterns.