The Ragged Island Ceramic tradition sits within the wider Ceramic Age of the northern Caribbean, a period when communities across the Bahamian archipelago remade shorelines with pottery, shell-working, and specialized coastal economies. Archaeological data indicates occupation at Flamingo Cay in the Ragged Island Range (Jumento Cays) between roughly 900 and 1500 CE; material culture from the area shows the hallmark ceramic styles and coastal resource use that define the Ragged Island assemblage.
Cinematically, imagine small settlements clustered on low limestone cays, where the wind shapes pottery rims almost as surely as hands do. Yet the story of emergence is still partly shadowed: limited stratigraphic sequences and sparse radiocarbon samples mean that precise local chronologies remain unresolved. Comparative studies place Ceramic traditions in the Bahamas as part of long-distance networks of people and ideas that moved through the Greater Antilles and into the Lucayan islands.
Archaeological evidence suggests continuity with earlier Ceramic populations in the Caribbean, but also local adaptations to the Bahamian environment — different subsistence strategies, settlement patterns, and craft traditions. Given the very small genetic sample available from Flamingo Cay, links between material culture and population movement are plausible but provisional, and more integrated excavation and aDNA sampling are needed to clarify origins.