South America Minor (820 – 963 CE):…
820 CE to 963 CE
South America Minor (820 – 963 CE): Forest–Steppe Frontiers, Sea-Nomad Routes, and Early Horticulture
Geographic and Environmental Context
South America Minor includes: southern Chile (including the Central Valley), southern Argentina (Patagonia south of the Río Negro and Río Grande), Tierra del Fuego, the Falkland Islands (Islas Malvinas), and the Juan Fernández Islands.
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Anchors: Araucanía–Central Valley (Bío-Bío–Imperial–Toltén), Chiloé, Patagonian steppe south of the Río Negro/Río Grande, Aysén–Magellanes fjords, Strait of Magellan–Beagle Channel, Tierra del Fuego, Falklands, Juan Fernández.
Climate and Environmental Shifts
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Within the Medieval Warm Period, cool–temperate westerlies and the Humboldt Current stabilized coastal productivity; Andean snowfall fed rivers.
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Steppe rainfall was variable; fjord coasts remained rich in shellfish, fish, and pinnipeds.
Societies and Political Developments
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Araucanía–Central Valley (Mapuche ancestors): small horticultural hamlets cultivated maize, beans, quinoa, and potatoes in fertile alluvial pockets; oak–rauli forests provided mast and timber.
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Patagonian steppe (Tehuelche ancestors): mobile hunting bands tracked guanaco and rhea across seasonal routes.
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Tierra del Fuego:
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Selk’nam (Ona) hunted the northern grasslands.
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Yaghan (Yámana) and Kawésqar sea nomads ranged the southern channels by bark canoes, harvesting shellfish, fish, and seals.
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Chiloé, Falklands, Juan Fernández: Chiloé hosted mixed foragers; Falklands/Juan Fernández remained uninhabited.
Economy and Trade
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Mixed subsistence: valley gardens + forest foods; steppe hunting; fjord fisheries.
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Exchange: obsidian and fine lithics moved along Andean passes into Araucanía; hides and sinew traded between steppe and forest communities.
Subsistence and Technology
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Horticulture: small clearings, ridged plots; digging sticks and stone hoes.
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Pastoral–hunting kit: bolas, bows, darts.
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Canoe technology: bark canoes, harpoons, bone tips; hearth-stones in boats for warmth.
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Shelters: plank-and-thatch in forests; toldos (hide tents) on steppe; bark windbreaks in Fuegian channels.
Movement and Interaction Corridors
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Andean passes linked Central Valley to steppe; Chiloé served as a maritime hinge; Strait of Magellan–Beagle corridors tied Fuegian bands.
Belief and Symbolism
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Mapuche ancestral spirits and earth/river beings; ritual specialists (machi) emerged as healers and rain mediators.
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Selk’nam initiations foreshadowed the later Hain; sea-nomads sacralized capes, winds, and cetaceans.
Adaptation and Resilience
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Portfolio strategies (gardens + forests + fisheries + game) buffered climatic swings; mobility in steppe and fjords minimized local failure risk.
Long-Term Significance
By 963, South America Minor sustained interlocking forest, steppe, and channel economies, setting deep patterns of mobility and exchange that would endure through cooler centuries.