Venezuela’s Saladoid peoples migrate to the Caribbean …

Years: 244 - 387

Venezuela’s Saladoid peoples migrate to the Caribbean Islands after apparently being driven from the Orinoco delta.

The Arawaks, including the largest representative group, the Taíno, have reached the Greater Antilles (specifically, Puerto Rico), and have begun to either intermingle or displace the simple gatherer-society of the Ciboneys.

Of the two schools of thought regarding the origin of the indigenous people of the West Indies, one group contends that the Arawakan ancestors of the Taíno came from the center of the Amazon Basin, subsequently moving to the Orinoco valley.

From there they reached the West Indies by way of Guyana and Venezuela into Trinidad, proceeding along the Lesser Antilles all the way to Cuba and the Bahamian archipelago.

Evidence that supports this theory includes the tracing of the ancestral cultures of these people to the Orinoco Valley and their languages to the Amazon Basin.

The alternate theory, known as the circum-Caribbean theory, contends that the ancestors of the Taíno diffused from the Colombian Andes.

Julian H. Steward, the theory's originator, suggested a radiation from the Andes to the West Indies and a parallel radiation into Central America and into the Guianas, Venezuela and the Amazon Basin.

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