The Lavoutte assemblage at Cas-en-Bas sits within the Ceramic Period of St. Lucia (ca. 1000–1450 CE), a time when pottery-bearing peoples expanded across the Lesser Antilles. Archaeological data indicates distinct ceramic styles and coastal occupation layers at the Lavoutte site, consistent with a maritime-adapted lifeway. Radiocarbon determinations from associated contexts place human activity firmly in the late first and second millennia CE, although site-phase resolution remains limited.
Genetically, the samples (n = 12) recovered from Lavoutte reveal patterns typical of Indigenous American populations. Y-chromosome lineage Q appears in six individuals, a signature often linked to pre-contact Native American paternal ancestry across the Americas. Maternal lineages are diverse — A2, B2e, D1 and C/C1c occur among the tested individuals — echoing widespread continental founder lineages that reached the Caribbean via South American trajectories. Together, the archaeological and genetic signatures support a narrative of south-to-north dispersals of ceramic-using peoples, adaptation to island environments, and localized population differentiation.
Caveats: the sample set is modest and localized to Cas-en-Bas; therefore hypotheses about island-wide origins, timing of arrival, and the full spectrum of cultural interaction should be treated cautiously pending broader regional sampling.