Archaeological data indicates that the islands of the northern Caribbean were colonized by people whose material culture shows affinities with Arawakan-speaking groups from northern South America. In the Bahamas, the Lucayan variant of Taíno culture emerges in the archaeological record around the first millennium CE, marked by pottery styles, shell tool assemblages, and habitation sites on islands like Eleuthera.
Preacher's Cave on Eleuthera is a locus of both mythic and scientific resonance: historically recorded as a shelter used by early mariners and later visitors, the cave context here produced a human bone sample dated to 892–1022 CE. That date places this individual within the early Lucayan phase of Bahamian settlement. Limited evidence suggests these settlers participated in island‑hopping maritime networks that linked the Greater Antilles, the northern Lesser Antilles, and the coast of northern South America.
Because the genetic dataset for the Bahamas is still very small (sample count: 1), any narrative about population origins must remain cautious. Archaeological patterns provide the broader framework, while this singular genetic observation offers a narrow, direct glimpse into maternal ancestry during a formative century of Bahamian history.