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      Hunter-gatherers, biogeographic barriers and the development of human settlement in Tierra del Fuego

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          Abstract

          Tierra del Fuego represents the southernmost limit of human settlement in the Americas. While people may have started to arrive there around 10 500 BP, when it was still connected to the mainland, the main wave of occupation occurred 5000 years later, by which time it had become an island. The co-existence in the area of maritime hunter-gatherers (in canoes) with previous terrestrial occupants pre-echoes the culturally distinctive groups encountered by the first European visitors in the sixteenth century. The study also provides a striking example of interaction across challenging natural barriers.

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          Late-glacial and Holocene palaeoenvironmental change in the central Strait of Magellan, southern Patagonia

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            Getting “Out of Africa”: Sea Crossings, Land Crossings and Culture in the Hominin Migrations

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              Sea Nomads of the Beagle Channel in Southernmost South America: Over Six Thousand Years of Coastal Adaptation and Stability

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                applab
                Antiquity
                Antiquity
                Cambridge University Press (CUP)
                0003-598X
                1745-1744
                March 01 2012
                January 2 2015
                : 86
                : 331
                : 71-87
                Article
                10.1017/S0003598X00062463
                e372c5c6-90e4-4b7d-8e41-cb81d3adce26
                © 2012
                History

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