The material and genetic story of Modern Peru is a palimpsest: coastal pre‑Columbian settlements, imperial-era reorganization, colonial upheaval, and global migration all write over one another. Archaeological landmarks in the Lima basin — including Huaca Pucllana and the ritual complex of Pachacamac — testify to continuous occupation of the central coast long before European contact. These sites reveal urban centers, ritual mounds, and midden deposits that document diet, craft, and social hierarchy.
By 2000 CE the individuals sampled for this dataset (n = 93, collected in Lima and other Peruvian localities) lived within a landscape shaped by the Inca imperial networks and four centuries of Spanish colonial rule followed by republican state formation. Archaeological data indicates long-term sedentism and coastal trade, alongside pulses of long‑distance movement. Limited evidence suggests substantial mobility during the 19th and 20th centuries — including migration from Andean highlands to coastal cities and transoceanic flows that brought Asian and African laborers — which are archaeologically visible in urban expansion, cemeteries, and changing material assemblages.
Archaeology therefore frames the genomes: the people represented are modern inheritors of millennia of regional interaction, not direct analogs of any single pre-Columbian population. Where archaeological sequences are rich, they provide context for interpreting genetic signals of continuity and change; where archaeological coverage is thin, conclusions must remain cautious.