Along the wind-swept coves of coastal Chile, the people represented by samples from Caleta Huelen 12 lived during the late first and early second millennium CE — broadly dated between 750 and 1150 CE (≈1100 BP). Archaeological data from the wider coastal zone during this interval indicate persistent small-scale fishing and foraging settlements, episodic mobility, and networks of exchange that connected littoral and inland groups. The designation “Middle Horizon Caleta Huelen” used for this assemblage situates these individuals within a regional sequence of cultural change but does not imply direct affiliation to the highland Middle Horizon political systems; coastal lifeways often retained distinct trajectories.
Genetically, the tiny sample set (n = 3) offers a tentative snapshot rather than a definitive portrait. The detected Y-chromosome lineage Q and maternal lineages B2 and A2 are well-known Pan-American haplogroups with deep roots in the Americas; their presence at Caleta Huelen 12 is consistent with long-standing coastal and continental population histories. Limited evidence suggests continuity with broader Andean and coastal populations, but the small number of genomes means any model of migration, admixture, or local continuity must remain provisional until larger datasets are available.
In short: the site captures a coastal community engaged with regional lifeways at ca. 1100 BP; the genetic markers align with Indigenous American lineages, but archaeological and genetic sampling remain sparse.