South America Major (28,577–7,822 BCE) | Upper …

Years: 28577BCE - 7822BCE

South America Major (28,577–7,822 BCE) | Upper Pleistocene II: Deglaciation, Refugia Reconnection, and Littoral Gateways

South America Major includes all regions north of the Río Negro: Colombia (except Darién), Venezuela, the Guianas, Brazil, Ecuador (excluding the Ecuadorian Capelands, which belong to Isthmian America), Peru, Bolivia, Paraguay, Uruguay, northern Argentina, and northern Chile.

Anchors: the Northern Andes (Quito–Cuzco–Titicaca–Altiplano), Amazon Basin (Solimões–Madeira–Xingu–Tapajós–Marajó), Orinoco–Llanos, the Atlantic Brazil shelf/coast (including sambaqui coasts), the Guianas Shield, and Atacama oases and salars (northern Chile).

  • Andean glaciers receded from late LGM maxima; puna and páramo belts rose upslope.

  • Amazon/Guianas: fragmented rainforest refugia reconnected along major trunks (Solimões, Madeira, Xingu, Tapajós).

  • Pacific littoral (Peru/ N. Chile): upwelling zones built shell- and kelp-rich coves; Atlantic Brazil shelf still broader than today.

  • Orinoco–Llanos: wetlands and gallery forests expanded in interstadials.

Climate & Environmental Shifts

  • Bølling–Allerød (14.7–12.9 ka): warmer/ wetter pulses reforested lowlands and stabilized Andean valley hydrology.

  • Younger Dryas (12.9–11.7 ka): cool/dry reversal; forest corridors pinched; littoral protein became critical.

  • Early Holocene (after 11.7 ka): warmth returned; rainfall increased, rivers bloomed.

Subsistence & Settlement

  • Secure, widespread human presence by ~13–12 ka across Pacific Peru, Andean foothills, and riverine lowlands:

    • Pacific coves (Peru/N. Chile): intensive shellfish, fish, seabirds; strandings; sea-plant harvesting (kelp, algae).

    • Andean valleys: deer, camelids (vicuña/guanaco in high puna), rodents, wild tubers; riparian plants.

    • Amazon/Orinoco: fish, turtles, capybara; palm fruits; small-game; wet-season camps on natural levees.

  • Guianas Shield: mixed forest-savanna foraging on inselbergs and gallery forests.

Technology & Material Culture

  • Microlithic flake–blade industries; bone gorges/harpoons; shell adzes in littoral zones; grindstones in Andean/lowland seed processing.

  • Ochre for body/ritual use; shell/seed ornaments.

Movement & Interaction Corridors

  • Pacific coastal “kelp highway”: cove-to-cove canoe/raft mobility;

  • Andean valley strings: springs/rock-shelter chains;

  • Amazon–Orinoco trunks + levee ridges: seasonal canoe drift and portage;

  • Atlantic Brazil strandlines: early shell-midden nuclei.

Cultural & Symbolic Expressions

  • Early rock-shelter ritual spaces in Andean/foothill belts; structured hearths; ochred burials.

  • Coastal shell-mounds served as feast/ancestor markers.

Environmental Adaptation & Resilience

  • Refugium tethering (riverine, littoral, and valley springs) + broad-spectrum diets reduced risk; seasonal scheduling across ecozones buffered the Younger Dryas.

Transition

By 7,822 BCE, deglaciated valleys, reconnected forests, and productive coasts supported semi-recurrent landscapes of camps and shell-midden nodes, setting the stage for semi-sedentary Holocene economies.

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