The earliest evidence on Liang Island (Matsu archipelago, Fujian coast) presents a picture of human settlement emerging in the Early Holocene shoreline environment. Radiocarbon determinations cluster between ca. 6370 and 5610 BCE, a time when rising seas and rich coastal ecosystems shaped human mobility. Archaeological data indicates shell middens, worked shell and bone, and simple lithic tools — traces of a maritime-adapted community exploiting rocky intertidal zones and nearshore fisheries.
Limited evidence suggests these island occupants were part of broader coastal networks that stretched along South China’s shoreline and into Island Southeast Asia. The material culture displays affinities with Early Neolithic coastal assemblages: emphasis on marine resources, lightweight expedient tools, and probable use of simple watercraft. Yet the archaeological record on Liang Island is thin, and interpretation depends on a small suite of sites and finds.
Cinematic, wind-scoured cliffs and midden terraces speak to seasonal rhythms and a knowledge of tides and currents. Archaeological data indicates these were not isolated castaways but participants in a shifting coastal frontier, where technology and social connections followed the tides. Given the limited dataset, claims about population origins remain tentative but point toward continuity with coastal East Asian foragers transitioning into early Neolithic lifeways.