Autores
Claudio Latorre, Calogero M Santoro, Paula C Ugalde, Eugenia M Gayo, Daniela Osorio, Carolina Salas-Egaña, Ricardo De Pol-Holz, Delphine Joly, Jason A Rech
Fecha de publicación
2013/10/1
Origen
Quaternary Science Reviews
Volumen
77
Páginas
19-30
Editor
Pergamon
Descripción
Few archeological sites in South America contain uncontroversial evidence for when the first peopling of the continent occurred. Largely ignored in this debate, extreme environments are assumed either as barriers to this early wave of migration or without potential for past habitability. Here, we report on a rare 12–13 ka human occupation from Quebrada Maní (site QM12), a plantless, near rainless landscape (1240 m asl and 85 km from the Pacific Ocean) located in the hyperarid core of the Atacama Desert. This location harbored wetlands and riparian woodlands that were fed by increased rainfall further east in the central Andes during the latest Pleistocene. Excavations at QM12 yielded a diverse cultural assemblage of lithics, burned and cut bones, marine gastropods, pigments, plant fibers, and wooden artifacts alongside a prepared fireplace. Sixteen radiocarbon dates from site QM12 on charcoal, marine shells …
Artículos de Google Académico
C Latorre, CM Santoro, PC Ugalde, EM Gayo, D Osorio… - Quaternary Science Reviews, 2013