The Kawésqar emerged as highly specialized maritime peoples in the labyrinth of channels, fjords, and islands at the southern edge of South America. Archaeological traces — coastal camps, shell middens, and ephemeral sites recorded in the Strait of Magellan and adjacent Patagonian channels — suggest a long-term adaptation to a cold, marine-rich environment. Ethnohistoric records from the 18th and 19th centuries, including accounts from explorers and early naturalists around places such as Puerto Edén, describe small, mobile bands traveling in dugout canoes and living largely from sea mammals, fish, and seabirds.
Genetic samples dated to the 19th century (1800–1900 CE) provide a late snapshot of this lifeway. With only five genotyped individuals from the Strait of Magellan, conclusions about deeper origins remain tentative. Limited evidence suggests continuity with broader Indigenous Southern Cone maternal lineages (mtDNA D) and paternal markers commonly found among Native American populations (Y haplogroup Q). Archaeological data indicates that these maritime strategies were part of a regionally distinct adaptation that developed over the Holocene, but the small sample number makes any fine-grained demographic reconstruction preliminary.