info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Palaeogeographic changes drove prehistoric fishing practices in the Cambaceres Bay (Tierra del Fuego, Argentina) during the middle and late Holocene
Fecha
2016-05Registro en:
Zangrando, Atilio Francisco Javier; Ponce, Juan Federico; Martinoli, Maria Paz; Montes, Alejandro; Piana, Ernesto Luis; et al.; Palaeogeographic changes drove prehistoric fishing practices in the Cambaceres Bay (Tierra del Fuego, Argentina) during the middle and late Holocene; Taylor & Francis; Environmental Archaeology; 21; 2; 5-2016; 182-192
1461-4103
1749-6314
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Zangrando, Atilio Francisco Javier
Ponce, Juan Federico
Martinoli, Maria Paz
Montes, Alejandro
Piana, Ernesto Luis
Vanella, Fabián Alberto
Resumen
Fishing intensification is evidenced in the archaeological record of the Beagle Channel region (Tierra del Fuego, Argentina) during the late Holocene by significant diachronic increases in both the representation of coastal taxa and the diversity of pelagic fish species taken. Faunal evidence from the Imiwaia I site, however, shows a different pattern in temporal variation in the exploitation of coastal fish in contrast to that of the regional trend. By comparing data from palaeogeography and archaeoichthyology, we have been able to evaluate how changes in Holocene coastal geomorphology near the Imiwaia I site influenced hunter–gatherer subsistence. The results show that the abundance and taxonomic diversity recorded in ichthyofaunal assemblages at the Imiwaia I site coincide with the environmental expectations arising from palaeogeographic reconstructions of the Cambaceres Bay during the middle and late Holocene.