Along the bending mouth of the Min River, communities clustered at Tanshishan and nearby Xitoucun during the Late Neolithic (c. 2850–2200 BCE), carving lifeways from tidal marshes and riverine plains. Archaeological data indicates shell middens, coastal dwellings, and pottery traditions adapted to a maritime-edge environment. Excavations at Tanshishan reveal stratified deposits that suggest sustained occupation through several centuries in which people combined foraging, fishing, and incipient rice cultivation.
Culturally, these sites sit within the broader Late Neolithic of southeast China, a dynamic horizon of localized pottery styles, polished stone tools, and emergent social differentiation. Limited evidence suggests exchanges with upriver and offshore groups; marine resources and riverine trade likely structured settlement choices. Material traces—shoreline middens, hearth features, and curvilinear dwelling post-holes—paint a picture of resilient coastal lifeways facing seasonal tides and monsoon rhythms.
From a temporal perspective, the 2850–2200 BCE window captures a phase of regional consolidation before later Bronze Age transformations. Archaeological data indicates that these Fujian communities were neither isolated nor static: they were part of a pulse of demographic, economic, and cultural interaction along China’s southeastern littoral.