The South Andros Ceramic assemblage sits in the cinematic liminal zone where ocean, wind and human craft meet. Archaeological data indicates that by ca. 900 CE small, ceramic-using communities occupied pockets of the Bahamian archipelago; these communities are conventionally placed within the Ceramic Period and are often associated with Lucayan cultural expressions in historic records. Excavations and survey work in South Andros — notably contexts tied to Sanctuary Blue Hole and the Stargate Blue 166 locality — reveal ceramic sherds, shell-rich midden deposits, and ephemeral habitation features that reflect a maritime-focused lifeway.
Material culture and settlement patterns are consistent with a broader wave of Ceramic-age dispersals across the Greater Antilles and into the Bahamas, linked by canoe routes and island-hopping networks. Linguistic and archaeological models commonly associate these movements with Arawakan-speaking groups. However, direct archaeological indicators (such as extensive field systems or large, permanent villages) are limited in the Bahamian record; much of what we understand comes from small sites and coastal deposits that preserve shells and pottery better than plant remains.
Limited evidence suggests these communities adapted specialized subsistence strategies to coral island environments, and regional diversity likely existed between islands and even between adjacent cays. The picture that emerges is of mobile, sea-savvy people whose arrival and persistence through the Ceramic Period reshaped the human geography of the Bahamas.