Imagine thin light sweeping across a rocky shore as boats or simple rafts come ashore and small bands move between coves. Archaeological interpretations for the Fuegian littoral suggest economies centered on marine resources: shellfish, intertidal organisms, seabirds, and fish would have formed reliable staples, supplemented by seasonally available terrestrial game. Hearth features and concentrations of shells in nearby sites indicate repeated, perhaps seasonal, encampment rather than dense sedentism.
Social groups were likely small kin-based units with flexible seasonal rounds. Tools required for this life would have included flaked stone for cutting and scraping, bone or antler implements, and containers for transport and storage—artifact types that often suffer taphonomic loss in high‑energy shore environments. Clothing and shelter strategies would be adapted to cold, windy conditions: ethnographic analogy and regional archaeology point to lightweight, highly portable technologies enabling mobility. Importantly, these reconstructions derive from patterns observed across the southern cone; direct evidence from La Arcillosa 2 itself is minimal, so hypotheses about household structure, belief systems, and social complexity remain speculative and in need of more excavation and recovery.