Along the rocky southern shores of what is today Santa Catarina state, the shellmound—sambaqui—at Jabuticabeira II preserves the layered traces of generations who lived from roughly 742 BCE to the turn of the Common Era. Archaeological data indicates successive midden-building episodes: accumulated shell, bone, pottery, and hearths that form a visible palimpsest of coastal occupation. These mounds are not simply refuse heaps but cultural landscapes: elevated living platforms, ritual loci, and cemeteries. The material assemblage—fish and shellfish remains, stone tools, and decorated ceramics—points to a lifeway intensely adapted to the marine littoral.
Regional comparisons tie Jabuticabeira II to the broader Sambaqui tradition that arose centuries earlier along Brazil’s Atlantic coast. Limited evidence suggests mobility and exchange along the shoreline, with stylistic links in pottery and shared midden construction techniques. While the archaeological sequence provides rich ecological and cultural context, it is inherently local: Jabuticabeira II offers a window into one community within a mosaic of coastal groups, and careful stratigraphic and radiocarbon work anchors this site within the 742–1 BCE interval without implying uniform behavior across all sambaquis.