
The United Confederation of Taíno People
Indigeneity, Puerto Rico
The United Confederation of Taíno People (UCTP) is an indigenous representative institution established in 1998 to promote the self-determination and protection of the human rights, culture, traditions, and sacred lands of Taíno and other…

La Historia Boricua: The Peopling of Puerto Rico
History, Indigeneity, Podcast, Puerto RicoIn this episode, Roberto looks at the information available about the evolution of the Indigenous peoples who first populated Puerto Rico, based on the most recent evidence, as well as their contribution to Taíno culture and, eventually, to our Puerto Rican identity.

Reconsidering the lives of the earliest Puerto Ricans: Mortuary Archaeology and bioarchaeology of the Ortiz site
History, Indigeneity, Puerto RicoWe possess rather little detailed information on the lives of the first inhabitants of Puerto Rico—the so-called “Archaic” or “Pre-Arawak” people—despite more than a century of archeological research.

Current Perspectives in the Precolonial Archaeology of Puerto Rico
History, Indigeneity
During the past two decades, many of the traditional conceptions about the configuration of the cultural landscape of precolonial Puerto Rico have been critically addressed from both political and disciplinary perspectives. Colonialist undercurrents…

Ancient DNA reconstructs the genetic legacies of pre-contact Puerto Rico communities
Genetics, Indigeneity
September 2019
Abstract
Indigenous peoples have occupied the island of Puerto Rico since at least 3000 B.C. Due to the demographic shifts that occurred after European contact, the origin(s) of these ancient populations, and their genetic…

Anthropological genetic insights on Caribbean population history
Genetics, Indigeneity
By Maria Alejandra Nieves Colon, University of Minnesota Twin Cities
Abstract
As the last American region settled by humans, yet the first to experience European colonization, the Caribbean islands have a complex history characterized…

What Became of the Taíno?
Colonialism, Indigeneity
Robert M. Poole October 2011
The Indians who greeted Columbus were long believed to have died out. But a journalist’s search for their descendants turned up surprising results
If you have ever paddled a canoe, napped in a hammock,…
