Cueva Calero sits like a silent recorder above the coastal plain at Cárdenas in Matanzas Province. Radiocarbon and stratigraphic data place human activity at the site between roughly 1400 BCE and 1300 CE, spanning late Archaic lifeways into early Ceramic age interactions. Archaeological data indicates repeated seasonal use: shell middens, hearth lenses, and flaked stone tools suggest groups skilled in littoral foraging — fishing, shellfish gathering, and exploiting coastal marshes.
The wider Archaic period in Cuba represents the island adaptation of early American populations who settled the Antilles after initial dispersals from continental source populations. Limited evidence suggests that these inhabitants maintained mobile, kin-based bands with deep knowledge of coastal ecologies rather than large sedentary villages. At Cueva Calero, the material traces are fragmentary and taphonomic processes have compressed centuries into thin deposits; therefore archaeological interpretations remain cautious. Nevertheless, the site contributes a vivid regional chapter: a people shaped by wind, reef, and the slow drift of oceanic seasons.
Key uncertainties remain about the timing and intensity of contact with later Ceramic-using groups and about demographic changes through time; both require broader excavation and increased chronological control.