Abstract

The Pleistocene–Holocene transition was a critical time for the dispersal of human societies all over South America. People looking for places to settle had to accept high environmental variability during the colonizing process. The case studied for this paper is Patagonia (Southern South America), where the oldest dates (ca. 13–10.5 ka BP) have been obtained for the peopling in the Deseado River Basin and Magellan Basin, as well. However, two archaeological sites yielded similar dates on the western side of the Andes (Monte Verde and Tagua Tagua). Following archaeological and palaeoenvironmental data (palynological, faunal, sedimentological and glaciological information), as well as radiocarbon datings, a hypothesis about the colonization of Patagonia is presented. Analysing the ways and time of colonization for this region, it is remarkable the coincidence of these ages in the centre of the steppe and close to the Magellan Strait, even in the present Tierra del Fuego island, though the eastern Andean foothills seems to be occupied at least two millennia later. It is proposed that independent peopling entries would have occurred both through the Atlantic and Pacific facades, and that the Andean foothills were colonized much later, only when the available spaces allowed it.

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