Across the windswept coves and arid plains of the Baja California peninsula, people adapted to a narrow world of sea and stone. Archaeological data from sites such as Iron Springs and Comondu reveal long-lived coastal foraging traditions that emerge in the late Holocene and persist into the late precontact period. Shell middens, hearth lenses, and flaked stone tools record rhythmic occupations tied to fish, shellfish, sea mammals, and seasonal plant resources. The chronological span attributed here (3000 BCE–1500 CE) summarizes varied local trajectories: some locales show continuity of coastal economies for millennia, while others reflect episodic use and mobility.
Limited evidence suggests maritime adaptations coexisted with inland exchange networks; obsidian and exotic shell ornaments imply long-distance contacts. Rock art panels and burial contexts—where preserved—hint at shared symbolic landscapes, though preservation bias obscures full cultural complexity. Ancient DNA from only two individuals offers a thread connecting bodies to place: it suggests these people carried genetic lineages common among Indigenous populations of the Americas, but with only two genomes the picture remains fragmentary. Archaeologists combine artifact assemblages, stratigraphy, and radiocarbon dates to build a textured narrative; genetics provides independent lines of inheritance and migration but must be weighed against the sparse skeletal record. Together, these datasets begin to illuminate how human communities emerged and adapted along Baja’s rugged coasts.