Life along the Beagle Channel unfolded at the edge of the sea: narrow camps perched on sheltered coves, hearths ringed with mussel shell, and caches of seasoned bone and wood. Canoes and paddles were central technologies, enabling travel between islands and access to seal rookeries, kelp beds, and seabird colonies.
Archaeological assemblages recovered at Almanza and Acatushún include worked bone implements, harpoon fragments, and stone flakes—evidence of sustained maritime hunting and tool maintenance. Social organization likely emphasized flexible kin networks and strong knowledge transmission of tides, currents, and weather. Seasonal cycles determined mobility, with groups moving to exploit spawning fish, seal pupping, and bird nesting seasons.
Ethnohistoric descriptions and the archaeological record together evoke a vivid coastal ecology in which crafted objects and bodies were tuned to wind, surf, and ice. Contact-era perturbations—diseases, missionization, and resource pressures—altered lifeways and demography, a pattern reflected in late historic changes to settlement distribution and artifact frequency.