The Panama_IsthmoColombian_Colonial assemblage spans a deep and dramatic arc: the earliest dated individuals fall around 895 CE, within a centuries‑long Isthmo‑Colombian horizon of complex coastal and riverine societies, and the latest approach 1700 CE, well into Spanish colonial domination. Archaeological excavations within modern Panama City — notably Sur de la Plaza, Catedral, and Plaza Casas Oeste — expose layered deposits where pre‑contact mortuary practices meet colonial church cemeteries. The cinematic image is of an urban palimpsest: Indigenous neighborhoods, cemeteries, and shrines transformed by mission churches, markets, and new population movements after 1519 CE.
Archaeological data indicates continuity of local occupation near the Pacific entrance to the Americas, but also clear disruptions after European contact. Burial contexts in plazas and beneath colonial foundations suggest both persistence of local funerary places and their appropriation into colonial urbanism. Limited evidence cautions that these seven individuals offer only a fragmentary view; broader regional comparisons are required to test whether the patterns observed here are local idiosyncrasies or representative of wider Isthmo‑Colombian trajectories.