Sardinia's Early Bronze Age unfolds in a theater of limestone cliffs, cave mouths, and sheltered coastal promontories. Archaeological data indicates habitation and mortuary use of rock shelters such as Su Crucifissu Mannu (Porto Torres), Su Stampu Erdi, Su Grutta ’e is Bittuleris and Grutta I de Longu Fresu (Seulo), Padru Jossu (Seneghe) and Riparo sotto roccia Su Asedazzu. Radiocarbon-dated contexts fall between 2468 BCE and 1600 BCE, marking a centuries-long phase of local adaptation and broader Mediterranean contact.
Material remains from these contexts—ceramics, metal objects, and personal ornaments—point to increasing metallurgical knowledge and exchange networks during the Early Bronze Age. Limited evidence suggests both persistent local traditions inherited from Neolithic and Chalcolithic communities, and new cultural influences arriving by sea or via continental corridors. Genetically, the island's assemblage preserves signatures of continuity alongside markers commonly associated with wider Bronze Age population movements.
Archaeological interpretations must remain cautious: depositional complexity in caves complicates chronology, and the current genetical sample set, while informative, is one piece of a larger puzzle. Ongoing excavation and additional ancient DNA sampling will refine narratives of how Sardinia’s communities emerged and interacted in this liminal island landscape.