The rocky headlands of La Clape overlook a braided Mediterranean coastline where human stories accumulate in caves and terraces. At Grotte des Tortues, stratified deposits and recovered human remains span the Late Neolithic into the Early Bronze Age (broadly 3261–1825 BCE). Archaeological data indicates occupation or repeated use across centuries by communities archaeologists group with the regional Veraza tradition — a coastal expression bridging inland farming zones and maritime resources.
Material traces in the region (ceramics, lithics and midden deposits in nearby sites) suggest a mixed economy and cultural ties along the Languedoc shore. Genetically, the tiny assemblage from Grotte des Tortues captures part of that story: maternal lineages dominated by haplogroup K and a single observed Y-haplogroup I point to a mosaic of ancestries. Because the sample count is only four, these genomic hints are preliminary. They nonetheless offer a cinematic snapshot — a few individuals whose bones whisper of farmers, foragers and long-distance connections during a time when European populations were transforming through migration, trade and technological change.