Backups are typically stored on an external drive.
All that writing of backup files to a slow external drive was found to consume a lot of I/O time, so Apple made a shift. In more recent macOS, the pointers to the files needed for the next backup set are now pre-collected in a snapshot disk image file. If you do not provide a physical drive soon enough, you may have several of these snapshots saved on the boot drive. They may not be on the MacOS volume.
But please, DO NOT delete them! instead, connect a physical backup drive and allow Time Machine to save some of them. Once saved onto an external physical drive, they will be deleted from the boot drive automatically.
If you do not have a recent local, disk-based backup, your computer is like a ticking Time bomb. You are only one disk failure, one mainboard failure, one crazy software, or one "oops" away from losing EVERYTHING! Drives do not last forever. It is not a question of IF it will fail, only WHEN it will fail. In addition, you never know when crazy software or Pilot Error throws away far more than you intended.
A major upgrade of MacOS re-writes over 350,000 files. You should ALWAYS have a local disk-based backup on hand before you do a major software update.