The archaeological record around Panama City's plazas paints a vivid, tactile portrait of daily life: bustling shorelines, trade networks across the isthmus, and tightly knit communities practicing local craft traditions. Ceramic assemblages and artifact scatters recovered in and around plaza burials (where present) imply connections to coastal fishing, horticulture, and interregional exchange across the Isthmus. Colonial-era layers introduce new material signatures — European goods, mission architecture — overlaying older household patterns.
Mortuary evidence provides a primary window into social identities. Interments beneath plaza and cathedral soils indicate continued use of ancestral places, while grave goods and body positions (where preserved) sometimes reflect a blending of Indigenous ritual practices with Christian burial norms. Historical events — notably the founding of Panama City in 1519 and the catastrophic sack of 1671 — would have dramatically reshaped commerce, population density, and daily subsistence, leaving traces in refuse, building collapse, and abrupt shifts in burial frequency.
Archaeological data indicates resilience amid change, but sample size is small and cannot capture the full variability of social life across the isthmus.