The individual from Pedra do Alexandre (Carnaúba dos Dantas, Rio Grande do Norte) lived within the window 2900–2450 BCE, a time when coastal and inland wetland landscapes of northeastern Brazil hosted diverse foraging communities. Archaeological data indicates occupation of shoreline, lagoon and riverine ecotones during the Brazilian Archaic period, broadly associated here with the Lagoa de Encantada hunter-gatherer tradition. Shell middens, scattered lithics and ephemeral hearth features in comparable sites suggest a seasonal, mobile use of resource-rich littoral habitats.
Limited evidence suggests these communities emphasized fishing, mollusk gathering and the exploitation of freshwater and estuarine resources, but preservation biases and sparse excavation mean that many details remain unclear. The genetic sample is a rare direct window into personal ancestry from this era: while the archaeological record provides landscape and material context, the DNA gives a human signature that can be compared to other ancient and modern genomes. Because this dataset is a single individual, any model of population movement, interaction or continuity must be treated as provisional. Further sampling across sites and time is required to move from evocative possibility to robust narrative.