Modern material remains — housing, ports, religious buildings, industrial archaeology, and rural terraces — document regional lifeways that shape population structure. In urban centers such as València, Bilbao (País Vasco), and Murcia, archaeological strata reveal centuries of continuous habitation, marketplaces, craft quarters and immigrant neighborhoods. Rural landscapes in Castilla y León, Castilla–La Mancha and Extremadura preserve patterns of agrarian terraces, haciendas, and transhumant routes that historically constrained or channeled local marriage and migration practices.
Islands and coastal communities developed livelihoods tied to the sea: fishing, shipbuilding and trade left archaeological footprints in the Canary Islands and the Balearics that correspond with historical movement of people. In contrast, mountain communities in Cantabria and parts of the Basque Country show archaeological evidence for long-term demographic stability and endogamy in some periods. Archaeological data indicate the Spanish Civil War and 20th-century industrialization created rapid demographic shifts, producing recent admixture layers that are detectable in modern genetic variation.
Together, settlement archaeology and historical records frame how daily life — economy, marriage networks, migration — produced the regional genetic landscape we sample today.