Toca do Enoque sits within the dramatic sandstone landscapes of Serra da Capivara in Piauí, a region rich in rock shelters and long human histories. The single sampled individual dates to 1681–1533 BCE (radiocarbon range). Archaeological data from the broader Serra da Capivara area indicate repeated use of caves and open-air sites by Late Holocene hunter-gatherer groups, but specific excavation details for this burial or context remain limited.
The cinematic cliffs and painted rock surfaces of the region belie an equally complex human story: seasonal mobility across riverine and dry woodland mosaics, opportunistic foraging, and the use of sheltered caves for short-term occupation or mortuary practices. Limited evidence suggests stone tools, hearth features, and patchy faunal remains characterize contemporaneous sites nearby, but careful excavation records are needed to link material culture directly to the sampled individual.
Because only one genome is available, any reconstruction of population emergence here is cautious. This specimen provides a temporal anchor for a hunter-gatherer presence in Serra da Capivara during the late second millennium BCE, hinting at continuity of deep South American lineages in northeastern Brazil.