The Putuni burial lies within the broader sweep of the Tiwanaku cultural horizon that dominated the southern Andean altiplano from roughly 500 to 1000 CE. Archaeological data indicates Putuni functioned as part of the Tiwanaku network surrounding Lake Titicaca — a landscape of raised fields, stone architecture and ritual plazas. Monumental centers at Tiwanaku (near present-day Tiwanaku site, La Paz Department) projected economic and religious influence across the highlands and into adjacent valleys.
Material culture at Putuni aligns with late Tiwanaku ceramic styles and architectural fragments found across contemporary sites; however, local variation suggests a mosaic of community roles rather than a single centralized identity. Limited evidence suggests that communities here combined intensive alpine agriculture with long-distance exchange, including obsidian and nonlocal pigments.
Genetic data from the single Putuni individual sits within this archaeological frame, offering a maternal lineage snapshot during a time of sociopolitical complexity. While the Tiwanaku phenomenon transformed the highlands, the people who inhabited Putuni negotiated local lifeways and regional connections, leaving behind burials that can now be paired with ancient DNA to illuminate patterns of ancestry, migration and continuity across the altiplano.