The sambaqui mounds that frame the landscape of Sambaqui do Limão are both monument and archive. Built from successive layers of shell, bone and refuse, these middens record centuries of coastal life. Radiocarbon dates associated with deposits at Limão indicate human activity spanning roughly 850 BCE to 1650 CE, situating this local expression within the long-lived Sambaqui cultural phenomenon of Brazil's Atlantic coast.
Archaeological data indicates a sequence of episodic mound construction, intensive shellfish harvesting, and periodic burial practices. Material culture—stone tools, fishhooks, and ornamented shells—speaks to specialized maritime adaptation. Limited evidence suggests changes over time in resource emphasis and mound architecture, possibly reflecting shifts in population density, social organization, or environmental conditions.
Genetic data from four sampled individuals provides a tentative anchor for these archaeological patterns. While the small sample size is insufficient to map full demographic trajectories, the presence of Indigenous genetic markers (see Genetics section) supports continuity of local coastal lineages through much of the pre-contact and contact periods. Together, mound stratigraphy and aDNA begin to illuminate how people built, inhabited, and remembered this shoreline for more than a millennium.