Perched in the thin air of the Laramate highlands, human presence between 750 and 1220 CE is heard in stone, pottery sherds and burial deposits. Archaeological data indicates communities occupied rocky slopes and sheltered caves at sites now recorded as Botigiriayocc, Cueva Yacotogia, Tranca and Huayuncalla. These loci sit within broader highland networks influenced by Wari-era expansion to the north and contemporaneous local developments.
The material traces — fragmentary ceramics, modified obsidian, and interment contexts reported at these sites — suggest lifeways adapted to steep terrain, with mixed cultivation of tubers and quinoa, camelid pastoralism, and seasonal mobility. Limited evidence suggests ritual use of caves and small-scale mortuary differentiation consistent with highland Andean traditions.
Chronologically the sample window spans late Middle Horizon influences into the early Late Intermediate period (regional chronologies vary). This transitional frame allows for interaction with larger polities while retaining strong local adaptations. Archaeology alone hints at a resilient mountain society; when combined with genetic data, a clearer picture of origin and continuity begins to emerge, though interpretations must remain cautious given the small sample size.