Cueva Roja sits like a red-stained inlet in the deep-time shorelines of Hispaniola. Archaeological data indicates human use of the cave and nearby coastal foraging zones between roughly 1300 BCE and 200 CE, within the broader Caribbean Archaic tradition. Excavations have recovered shell middens, flaked stone tools and organic traces that suggest repeated seasonal occupations and a nuanced knowledge of littoral resources.
Limited evidence suggests the people who used Cueva Roja were part of mobile coastal forager networks that linked islands and nearby continental coasts. The material culture—simple but effective lithics and dense shell deposits—echoes other Antillean Archaic localities, yet each site retains local signatures in tool morphologies and refuse patterns. Archaeological interpretations remain cautious: stratigraphic mixing, coastal erosion, and intermittent excavation histories mean that our picture is fragmentary.
When combined with ancient DNA from three individuals, a tentative narrative emerges: these were Indigenous American lineages deeply adapted to island life, moving and exchanging across maritime landscapes. However, because only three genetic samples are currently available, any model of migration or population continuity must be treated as provisional. Ongoing fieldwork and more aDNA samples are required to trace origins more precisely.