Archaeological data indicates that the sambaquis — monumental shell-mound sites — along Brazil’s southeast coast were created by generations of coastal foragers who reshaped shorelines with the detritus of daily life. Sambaqui do Limão, the sampled site, sits on a rocky promontory where layered deposits of shells, fish bone, and refuse formed durable mounds. Radiocarbon ranges for the sampled individual place human activity at Limão between 811 and 571 BCE, a moment when coastal economies were rich with marine resources and local craft traditions.
Limited evidence suggests these mounds functioned as multi‑purpose loci: habitational terraces, refuse heaps that became cultural foundations, and loci for funerary practice. Shell architecture at Limão preserves the vertical history of repeated occupation, with interleaved living floors and burial pits. While the broader Sambaqui Culture extends across many centuries and hundreds of sites, the material record at Limão captures a late phase in which communities intensified shoreline use.
This birthplace of layered shells and bones is both a physical archive and a stage for centuries of seasonal rhythms — fishing, shellfish collection, and the social acts of depositing food waste and the dead. The archaeological picture is vivid but localized: with only a single ancient genome from Limão, patterns of population movement and cultural transmission must still be treated as provisional.