IDEAUS - CENPAT   25626
INSTITUTO DE DIVERSIDAD Y EVOLUCION AUSTRAL
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
capítulos de libros
Título:
Archaeology of the Península Valdés: spatial and temporal variability in the human use of the landscape and geological resources
Autor/es:
SCHUSTER, V.; GÓMEZ OTERO, J.; BANEGAS, A.
Libro:
Late Cenozoic of Península Valdés: an interdisciplinary approach
Editorial:
Springer Nature
Referencias:
Lugar: Cham; Año: 2017; p. 233 - 261
Resumen:
The archaeological record of Península Valdés shows this area was intensively used by native hunter-gatherers since at least 5000 years BP to the 19th Century. These populations located their settlements in sandfields across the littoral zone, primarily on coastal bajadas and low marine terraces near fixed shoals of molluscs. Archaeofaunal studies and stable isotope analyses (13C and 15N) of human bone samples indicate that they had a terrestrial-marine diet including guanaco meat, land plants, mollusks, fish and pinnipeds. The old inhabitants of the peninsula profited local rocks and clay minerals to manufacture their artefacts. To lithic technology they used small pebbles of silica and basalt, big pebbles of riolites and granites, consolidated sandstones and fossil cetacean bones. The basic toolkit comprised knives, end-scrapers, side-scrapers, drills, burins, notches, fishing weights, and a variety of projectile points. The big pebbles were used as manos, hammer stones and anvils, while sandstones and fossil bones were primarily employed in milling activities. With respect to pottery technology, the abundance and good quality of local clay sources allowed its important development in the Final Late Holocene. Most vessels present oval or spherical shapes, straight sides and concave bases. All these features are suitable for domestic activities, e.g., preparing, storing and/or cooking food and liquids. These hunter-gatherers did not live isolated from other populations: the presence of foreign rocks and of three ceramic vessels that might have been manufactured in northwest Patagonia or perhaps central Chile, indicate that they took part in an extensive trading net since at least the Late Holocene.