Abstract

We studied the micromammal remains recovered from the stratigraphic sequence of the archaeological site Tres Arroyos 1 (53o 23’ S, 68o 47’ W, Tierra del Fuego, Chile). The samples obtained from Late Pleistocene levels (ca. 12.5-10 ky) are mainly composed by Euneomys chinchilloides and Ctenomys magellanicus, with the unique occurrence of Eligmodontia sp., a sigmodontine today extinct in the Isla Grande de Tierra del Fuego but with populations in the southernmost mainland. These assemblages suggest very hard paleoenvironments with a general rocky and bare landscape under deep cold and windy conditions. The Late Holocene samples (ca. 1.7 ky-present), by the contrary, are composed basically by Reithrodon auritus, C. magellanicus, some sigmodontine species typically from southern Tierra del Fuego forests (e.g. Oligoryzomys magellanicus, Abrothrix lanosa), and show a declination of E. chinchilloides. These assemblages indicate amelioration in the environmental conditions surely coupled with the regional development of shrub and herbaceous steppes and perhaps a north displacement of the forest line. Taphonomically, pleistocenic assemblages seem to be mainly produced by the trophic activity of carnivore mammals, while those holocenic suggest a mixed origin with participation of owl pellets (especially for sigmodontine remains) and human consumption (responsible for a part of the Ctenomys remains). In overall, the micromammal evidence is in agreetment with the results obtained from other paleoclimatic records (e.g. polen).

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