Ayayema Cave sits in the western archipelago off southern Chile, where rocky coves and narrow channels focus marine resources. Radiocarbon dates from stratified deposits place human activity in the mid‑Holocene, between roughly 3364 and 2933 BCE. Archaeological data indicates repeated occupation episodes: shell middens, fragmented bone of fish and seabirds, and chipped stone tools adapted for marine hunting and processing.
Limited evidence suggests these groups were part of a broader pattern of coastal foragers who specialized on rich intertidal and nearshore ecologies of southern Patagonia. Sea‑level adjustments and local ecological shifts in the mid‑Holocene likely shaped settlement intensity and mobility. The cultural label "Western Archipelago Ayayema" reflects a regional assemblage rather than a well‑defined ethnic identity — the archaeological signal is fragmentary and largely constrained to cave and coastal deposits.
Because the genetic dataset presently includes a single genome from Ayayema Cave, hypotheses about population origins, continuity, or interaction with inland groups remain provisional. Nevertheless, combining the stratigraphic record with this first genetic hint opens pathways to test ideas about maritime colonization, resource specialization, and long‑term coastal resilience.