ABSTRACT
Hunter-fisher-gatherer societies who inhabited the south-eastern Atlantic Coast of Isla Grande de Tierra del Fuego (Argentina) exploited a wide range of local raw materials that includes, among others, metamorphic, fine-grained rocks and slates that exhibit different physical properties. The aim of this work is to discuss raw materials procurement and production strategies in relation to tool usage. For that purpose, we studied eight archaeological sites retrieved in the Late Holocene. We will focus on the economic practices that involve lithic raw materials to understand technological organization based on the use-wear method and morpho-technical analysis. The results show that these societies developed a technological strategy that implied the selection of rocks with specific properties for performing different and singular activities. Fine-grained rocks were mainly exploited for manufacturing small retouched tools used for scraping hides whereas metamorphic rhyolites and slates were mostly procured to produce long retouched blanks for sawing hard materials.
Acknowledgments
To Vargas family, Don Vera, Mrs. Isabel and Mr. Morocco for their generosity during fieldwork activities. To the two anonymous reviewers whose suggestions were very helpful to improve this paper.
Disclosure statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).