On the edge of the Southern Ocean, the Selknam (also called Ona) occupied the northern reaches of Tierra del Fuego, a landscape of windswept plains, peat bogs, and jagged coastlines. Archaeological sites in the north—Margen Sur, Pozo Tierra del Fuego 1, Puesto Pescador, and Río Grande—preserve hearths, stone tools, and faunal remains that document centuries of maritime and terrestrial foraging. Radiocarbon-dated material in the present dataset spans roughly 1040 CE to 1960 CE, situating these samples in the late Holocene and into the era of intense colonial contact.
Material culture and stratigraphic sequences suggest long-term continuity of mobile hunter-gatherer lifeways focused on seabirds, marine mammals, shellfish, and guanaco where accessible. Ethnographic records from the 19th and early 20th centuries describe complex ritual life—most famously the Hain initiation ceremony—complementing the archaeological picture of a socially structured, mobile population. Limited evidence suggests regional connections across the greater Patagonian archipelago, but the degree and direction of prehistoric movement remain under study.
Archaeological data indicates that environmental resilience and coastal resource use shaped Selknam settlement patterns. Genetic data (see Genetics section) now provide a complementary line of evidence, hinting at ancestral ties shared across southern South America. Because sample numbers remain small, models of origin and interaction should be treated as provisional.