C. Garciamoro et al., ESTIMATION OF THE OPTIMUM DENSITY OF THE SELKNAM FROM TIERRA-DEL-FUEGO - INFERENCES ABOUT HUMAN DYNAMICS IN EXTREME ENVIRONMENTS, American journal of human biology, 9(6), 1997, pp. 699-708
The Selk'nam, a hunter-gatherer group that inhabited Isla Grande (Tier
ra del Fuego), became extinct soon after coming into contact with Euro
peans (XIX century). The population of this tribe was estimated from m
ission archives and the application of a hunter-gatherer ecological mo
del. Both approaches suggest that the widely accepted number of 3,500-
4,000 individuals for this human group is an overestimation, and that
1,500 may be more accurate. This yields a population density of 0.04 p
ersons/km(2), avery low value, but which is in accordance with the ext
remely harsh environment. The low population density was an essential
adaptive strategy to the complex ecological equilibrium of Tierra del
Fuego. Indirectly, this factor may have contributed to the rapid disap
pearance of this population with the breakdown of the traditional way
of life. In addition, the missionary registers show that most of the a
borigines died of infectious diseases, a situation exacerbated by the
high population density in the missions. The reconstruction of the dec
line of the Selk'nam population may be used to evaluate the impact of
European contact on other American hunter-gatherer groups and also to
elucidate the adaptive patterns of human groups in adverse environment
s. (C) 1997 Wiley-Liss, Inc.