The Channel Islands during the Middle Neolithic appear as a liminal world at the edge of the Atlantic — rocky shores, sheltered bays, and the slow reworking of island communities after the arrival of farming in northwest Europe. Le Déhus, a well‑known chambered tomb in the parish of Vale on Guernsey, yielded human remains dated to 4241–3968 BCE. Archaeological data indicates deliberate burial practices and carved stone art at the site, linking it culturally to broader Atlantic and British Isles megalithic communities.
Maritime mobility and coastal resource use likely shaped settlement choices: limited arable land made mixed economies — small‑scale cultivation, domestic animals, and rich marine foraging — attractive strategies. Pottery styles and lithic technology from nearby mainland sites suggest ties with southern Britain and Brittany, but the island setting fostered local traditions in tomb construction and funerary ritual.
Genetic evidence from a small number of individuals (three samples) offers glimpses into population origins, but the sample count is too low for firm population‑level claims. Limited evidence suggests continuity with regional Neolithic networks rather than entirely isolated development. Archaeology therefore frames the Channel Islands as nodes of contact where maritime routes and local lifeways intersected in the fourth millennium BCE.