The Jabuticabeira II complex is part of the Sambaqui tradition of Brazil's southern coast, where generations built monumental shell middens and burial features. Archaeological data indicates active mound construction and repeated seasonal or year-round use of coastal resources during the late Holocene. Radiocarbon-calibrated dates for the samples under study fall between 364 BCE and 57 BCE (approximately 2200 calendar years before present), situating these individuals within a long-lived tradition of maritime adaptation.
Sambaquis are archaeological landscapes of layered shells, hearths, and human interment. Their accumulation represents centuries of intensive shellfish gathering, fishing, and onshore processing. The material record at Jabuticabeira II includes faunal remains, lithic tools, and burial contexts that together evoke communities highly attuned to estuarine and nearshore ecologies. Limited evidence suggests these sambaqui builders maintained place-based connections to specific shoreline locales, leaving visible earthworks that structured movement and memory along the coast.
Because preserved ancient DNA from coastal Brazil is still sparse, the Jabuticabeira II genomes provide rare direct glimpses of individual ancestries. Archaeological context and dated materials anchor the genetic samples in a well-defined cultural horizon, but the broader demographic processes that produced sambaqui villages—migration, local continuity, and social exchange—remain areas for further study.