The Late Latte period on Guam is an island drama written in stone and sand. Archaeological deposits at Haputo and other coastal localities record the appearance and elaboration of latte architecture — paired stone columns (haligi) and capstones (tasa) — that anchor social memory across the Marianas. Radiocarbon contexts and stratified midden layers place the Late Latte horizon roughly between 1000 and the 17th century CE, a time when seafaring networks across Island Southeast Asia and Remote Oceania continued to ripple cultural innovations and people.
Archaeological data indicate that Haputo functioned as a coastal village and ritual landscape: cave deposits, shell middens, and latte house sites preserve faunal remains, worked shell, and ground stone tools. Material culture demonstrates continuity from earlier Mariana occupations but with distinct Late Latte elaborations in architecture and mortuary practice.
Genetically, the small set of four ancient individuals from Haputo offers a fragile but vivid thread: all four sampled individuals carry mitochondrial haplogroup E2a, a maternal lineage documented in parts of Island Southeast Asia and the Pacific. Limited evidence suggests maternal continuity within the island chain during the Late Latte era, but the few samples (n = 4) mean population-level patterns remain provisional. Ongoing excavations and a larger ancient DNA sample will be required to robustly map migration, admixture, and demographic change across the Marianas.