It is not known when the earliest …

Years: 1396 - 1539

It is not known when the earliest humans reached what is now Colombia.

The oldest evidence of occupation, which is pending confirmation, dates from before twenty thousand BCE, at sites in the central Andean highlands, but the first native peoples undoubtedly arrived earlier, coming presumably by way of the Isthmus of Panama.

Over succeeding millennia, there are further migrations and mutual cultural influences between different geographic regions of Colombia and not just Central America but the Caribbean, coastal Ecuador, and the Amazon region.

It is likely that settled, partly agricultural societies first arose in the northern Caribbean lowlands of Colombia by the second millennium BCE.

No single dominant native culture has emerged.

Rather, most of the original Colombians belong to one or another of three major linguistic groups—Arawak, Carib, and Chibcha—and comprise a patchwork of separate cultures and subcultures.

These indigenous peoples develop the cultivation of yucca in the lower elevations, maize at middle altitudes, and potatoes in the highlands.

They practice ceramic pottery and other crafts, with impressive achievements in the working of gold from alluvial deposits, and by the time of the Europeans' arrival, they generally display  the beginnings of both social stratification and a political system on the basis of chieftainships.

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