The samples assigned to "Modern Gambia" capture life at a single temporal snapshot: the year 2000 CE. Archaeological continuity along the Gambian coast — seen in settlement traces, fishing infrastructure, and trade-linked artefacts — creates a long visual of human occupation, but modern collections reflect living communities rather than deep-time layers.
Archaeological data indicates persistent coastal economies shaped by estuarine resources of the Gambia River and Atlantic littoral. Landscapes of mangrove, tidal flats and riverine floodplains have long directed settlement, mobility and material culture. Ethnohistoric records and excavations elsewhere in Senegambia show how trade, seasonal fishing, and small-scale agriculture form a resilient fabric that frames modern lifeways.
Genetically, this snapshot sits atop millennia of movement across West Africa. Limited evidence in this dataset (haplogroups not listed) prevents direct claims about specific lineages in these 113 samples, but comparative regional studies point toward deeply rooted West African ancestries that reflect both local continuity and historical interactions.