The story of the Guanche begins like a slow tide: people crossing the Atlantic fringe from North Africa and settling volcanic islands whose cliffs and caves became repositories of memory. Archaeological evidence on Tenerife and Gran Canaria — including cave occupations, rock-cut funerary chambers and dry-stone architecture at sites associated with Risco Caído (Gran Canaria) and cave systems such as Cueva del Viento (Tenerife) — indicates island colonization during the first millennium BCE, consistent with calibrated radiocarbon dates in the input range (earliest ~1031 BCE).
Material culture is characterized by simple pastoral and agricultural adaptations to island environments: pottery fragments, stone tools, terraced fields, and elaborate burial constructions carved into rock. These features point to small, mobile kin groups adapting North African traditions to Atlantic islands. Limited evidence suggests staggered settlement pulses rather than a single colonizing wave; island-to-island interaction and local innovation generated distinct island cultures within the broader Guanche identity.
Archaeological data indicates continuity in ritual landscapes — burial caves, mountain sanctuaries, and talayotic-like structures — but also change over time as new resources and external contacts influenced practices. Where preservation is uneven, interpretations remain provisional and benefit from integration with ancient DNA to clarify population origins and movement.