Different(ial) Human Use of Coastal Landscapes: Archaeological Contexts, Chronology, and Assemblages of El Teniente Bay (31 degrees S, Chile, South America)

Mendez, Cesar; Nuevo-Delaunay, Amalia; Grasset, Sebastian; Maldonado, Antonio; Seguel, Roxana; Troncoso, Andres; Talep, Claudia; Villalon, Daniela

Abstract

Coastal landscapes of the Pacific coast of South America are regarded as bountiful biomes, as they are zones on the fringes of Eastern Boundary Upwelling Ecosystems. Cumulative research shows an almost uninterrupted presence of mobile hunter-fisher-gatherer communities throughout the Holocene in North-Central Chile (29 degrees-32 degrees S). However, local-scale differences reveal the variability that is concealed by this broad characterization. Recent research in El Teniente Bay (31 degrees S) shows few sites and occupations suggestive of low occupational redundancy as well as reduced archaeological assemblages, indicating limited activities in this landscape. However, several occupations date to the middle Holocene, a period when discontinuities in human occupations in response to adverse environmental conditions have been suggested on regional and supraregional scales. The main occupations detected at El Teniente are interpreted as a response to such conditions and in the context of changes in land use. Despite the spottiness of the archaeological record of El Teniente Bay, it is important in terms of its chronology and the differing trends in the use of space in comparison to other areas that have been the focuses of research. This paper addresses the archaeological record of El Teniente Bay and discusses its implications for human land use in the wider area of the coast of North-Central Chile.

Más información

Título según WOS: Different(ial) Human Use of Coastal Landscapes: Archaeological Contexts, Chronology, and Assemblages of El Teniente Bay (31 degrees S, Chile, South America)
Título de la Revista: LAND
Volumen: 10
Número: 6
Editorial: MDPI
Fecha de publicación: 2021
DOI:

10.3390/land10060577

Notas: ISI