The West Indies (2637 – 910 BCE):…
2637 BCE to 910 BCE
The West Indies (2637 – 910 BCE): Ceramic Seas, Conuco Gardens, and Canoe Corridors
Regional Overview
Across the island arc from Trinidad & Tobago to Hispaniola, Early Antiquity in the West Indies was an age of ceramic horizons, cassava landscapes, and maritime exchange.
Arawakan-speaking communities advanced northward from the Orinoco gateway, planting conuco mounds, weaving cotton, and shaping a lattice of plaza villages and canoe routes that bound large islands to smaller cays.
By 910 BCE, eastern and western Hispaniola, Puerto Rico, and the Lesser Antilles supported densifying village systems—Ostionoid in ascendance from earlier Saladoid roots—while the shallow banks of the Bahamas/Turks & Caicos formed the Lucayan threshold, visited but not yet permanently settled.
Geography & Environment
The West Indies comprise large, resource-rich Greater Antilles and the volcanic chain of the Lesser Antilles, punctuated by exchange narrows (e.g., the Virgin Islands), windward passages, and shallow-bank frontiers:
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Northern arc: north Hispaniola (Cibao–Puerto Plata–Cap-Haïtien shelves) with the Bahamas/Turks–Caicos banks to the north.
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Eastern arc: Puerto Rico, eastern Hispaniola, and the Leeward–Windward islands, including Trinidad & Tobago at the Orinoco gate.
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Western arc: Cuba, Jamaica, western Haiti with the Port-de-Paix–Tortuga hinge, Gonâve Gulf, and the Cayman Ridge.
Humid tropical conditions prevailed, with episodic hurricanes and robust freshwater lenses on larger cays. River-fed plains and reef-speckled shelves offered complementary terrestrial and marine resource bases.
Climate & Environmental Shifts
Late-Holocene stability featured episodic storms that shaped settlement dispersal and exchange redundancy.
Stable freshwater lenses on larger cays and perennial streams on big islands buffered dry spells.
Cyclone risk encouraged multi-island provisioning and canoe evacuation strategies—early hallmarks of Caribbean resilience.
Societies & Settlement
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Eastern West Indies: Puerto Rico and eastern Hispaniola densified into plaza hamlets organized around cassava plots, orchard belts, and communal spaces; the Virgin Islands functioned as exchange narrows between islands. Smaller Leeward–Windward isles sustained garden hamlets linked by short sea hops; chiefly consolidation was underway by the close of the period.
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Western West Indies: Along the Windward Passage–Jamaica Channel, the Port-de-Paix–Tortuga corridor connected Massif du Nord gardens to canoe routes reaching Cuba and Jamaica. Plaza villages on Cuba and Jamaica exchanged cotton cloth and stone celts; the Caymans served seasonally for salt and turtle.
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Northern West Indies: Northern Hispaniola hosted early Taíno precursors (Saladoid → Ostionoid transitions) with conuco horticulture and plaza hamlets; Bahamas/Turks–Caicos saw exploratory camps and resource forays but no enduring Lucayan villages yet.
Economy & Technology
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Horticulture & arboriculture: cassava (in conuco mounds), maize locally, plus cotton, peppers, fruit trees; coastal fisheries and reef gleaning supplied steady protein.
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Materials & crafts: Ostionoid ceramics (from earlier Saladoid styles), stone celts, shell adzes, drilled shell fishhooks, cotton weaving, and barkcloth.
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Watercraft: large dugout canoes capable of open-water passages, navigating banks and channels by stars, swells, and seamarks; salt-making, drying racks, and storage pits provided storm reserves.
Movement & Interaction Corridors
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Northern hinge: Cibao ↔ Turks & Caicos canoe circuits moved salt, turtle, dried fish, and cotton, stabilizing food webs after storms.
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Western lattice: Cuba ↔ Tortuga/Port-de-Paix ↔ Jamaica via Gonâve Gulf and Jamaica Channel; Cayman seasonality tied to salt and turtle.
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Eastern web: Trinidad & Tobago as the Orinoco gate; Puerto Rico–Virgin Islands as exchange narrows; Leeward–Windward stepping-stones distributed ceramics, seed stocks, and textiles.
These corridors formed an integrated canoe economy with redundant routes—the Caribbean strategy for risk.
Belief & Symbolism
Zemí cult seeds permeated village ritual: ancestor shrines at plaza margins, household altars, and plaza feasts binding lineages and neighbors.
Batey (ball-court) diplomacy emerged in the larger islands, ritualizing alliance and rivalry.
Motifs of spirals, serpents, and sea forms appeared on ceramics and ornaments, embedding cosmology in daily vessels, while storm rites and first-cassava observances synchronized subsistence with the seasonal sea.
Environmental Adaptation & Resilience
Security rested on cassava bread + reef protein and multi-island provisioning.
Households spread gardens, shellfish grounds, and salt sites across archipelagos; canoe mobility allowed evacuation before storms and resupply afterward.
Redundant storage (dried fish, cassava bread, cotton sacks) stabilized lean seasons; alliance marriages and ritual hospitality kept exchange channels open.
Regional Synthesis & Transition
By 910 BCE, the West Indies had become a ceramic and canoe civilization:
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Eastern arcs densified into village clusters with early chiefly hierarchies;
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Western corridors hinged on Tortuga–Port-de-Paix, knitting Cuba and Jamaica into a shared provisioning system;
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Northern Hispaniola poised the region for a Lucayan expansion into the Bahamas/Turks–Caicos in the centuries ahead.
The Ostionoid village lattice, conuco landscapes, and canoe corridors formed the infrastructural grammar of later Taíno and Lucayan worlds—a Caribbean of plazas and passages, resilient under storms and united by sea.