Luzia died in her early 20s. Although flint tools were found nearby, hers are the only human remains in Vermelha Cave.
The anatomy of her skull and teeth - including a narrow, oval cranium, projecting face and pronounced chin - likens Luzia to Africans and Australasians. Brazilian anthropologists propose that Luzia traveled across the Bering Strait, perhaps following the coastline by boat, from northeast Asia, where her ancestors had lived for tens of thousands of years since exiting Africa. Copyright © 1999 Discovery Communications Inc.
The site provides links to other finds as well.
The above speculation seems to be a forlorn hope of breathing life into the Bering Strait theory. It would mean that Luzia's group had worked their way south, bypassing an awful lot of prime real estate, before reaching the Peru area. Then, they decided to cross the Andes and head for eastern Brazil!
Why not just speculate that they rounded the Cape and worked their way up the other side?