Towering heaps of shell and bone—sambaquis—dot the Atlantic coast of Brazil and testify to generations who lived by the sea. The Vau‑Una mound at Vau - Sta. M. Vitória in Northeast Brazil belongs to this long‑lived coastal tradition often called the Sambaqui Culture. Archaeological data indicates that sambaqui building began millennia earlier in some regions; the Vau‑Una context for our sample dates to 1318–1409 CE, placing it among late pre‑contact coastal communities.
Environmental reconstructions suggest these sites grew where estuaries and rich intertidal zones provided abundant shellfish, fish, and birds. Shell mounds functioned as refuse deposits, habitation platforms, and sometimes cemeteries—markers of repeated, seasonal marine exploitation. Limited evidence from Vau‑Una supports a community organized around maritime resources, with material traces that include worked bone, shell ornaments, and human interments.
Because this entry rests on a single genome, conclusions about population origins remain tentative. Archaeological patterns suggest continuity in coastal foraging strategies and regional interaction across centuries; genetic data from Vau‑Una can be read as a first glimpse into the biological ancestry of one individual within these broader cultural landscapes. Further excavation and sampling are needed to track demographic continuity, migration, and social change across the sambaqui coastline.