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Patagonia

Patagonia (Spanish pronunciation: [pataˈɣonja]) is a geographical region that encompasses the southern end of South America, governed by Argentina and Chile. The region comprises the southern section of the Andes Mountains with lakes, fjords, temperate rainforests, and glaciers in the west and deserts, tablelands and steppes to the east. Patagonia is bounded by the Pacific Ocean on the west, the Atlantic Ocean to the east, and many bodies of water that connect them, such as the Strait of Magellan, the Beagle Channel, and the Drake Passage to the south.

Patagonia
Area
 • Total1,043,076 km2 (402,734 sq mi)
Population
 • Total1,999,540
 • Density1.9/km2 (5.0/sq mi)
DemonymPatagonian
Demographics
 • LanguagesRioplatense Spanish, Chilean Spanish, Mapudungun, Welsh

The Colorado and Barrancas rivers, which run from the Andes to the Atlantic, are commonly considered the northern limit of Argentine Patagonia.[1] The archipelago of Tierra del Fuego is sometimes included as part of Patagonia. Most geographers and historians locate the northern limit of Chilean Patagonia at Huincul Fault, in Araucanía Region.[2][3][4][5]

At the time of the Spanish arrival, Patagonia was inhabited by multiple indigenous tribes. In a small portion of northwestern Patagonia, indigenous peoples practiced agriculture, while in the remaining territory, peoples lived as hunter-gatherers, traveling by foot in eastern Patagonia or by dugout canoe and dalca in the fjords and channels. In colonial times indigenous peoples of northeastern Patagonia adopted a horseriding lifestyle.[6] While the interest of the Spanish Empire had been chiefly to keep other European powers away from Patagonia, independent Chile and Argentina began to colonize the territory slowly over the course of the 19th and early 20th centuries. This process brought a decline of the indigenous populations, whose lives and habitats were disrupted, while at the same time thousands of Europeans, Argentines, Chilotes and mainland Chileans settled in Patagonia. Border disputes between Argentina and Chile were recurrent in the 20th century.[citation needed]

The contemporary economy of eastern Patagonia revolves around sheep farming and oil and gas extraction, while in western Patagonia fishing, salmon aquaculture, and tourism dominate. Culturally, Patagonia has a varied heritage, including Criollo, Mestizo, Indigenous, German, Croat, Italian, English, Scottish, and Welsh influences.[citation needed]

Etymology and toponomies edit

The name Patagonia comes from the word patagón.[7] Magellan used this term in 1520 to describe the native tribes of the region, whom his expedition thought to be giants. The people he called the Patagons are now believed to have been the Tehuelche, who tended to be taller than Europeans of the time.[8][9] Argentine researcher Miguel Doura observed that the name Patagonia possibly derives from the ancient Greek region of modern Turkey called Paphlagonia, possible home of the patagon personage in the chivalric romances Primaleon printed in 1512, ten years before Magellan arrived in these southern lands. This hypothesis was published in a 2011 New Review of Spanish Philology report.[10]

There are various placenames in the Chiloé Archipelago with Chono etymologies despite the main indigenous language of the archipelago at the arrival of the Spanish being Mapudungun.[11][12] A theory postulated by chronicler José Pérez García explains this holding that the Cuncos (also known as Veliches) settled in Chiloé Island in Pre-Hispanic times as a consequence of a push from more northern Huilliches who in turn were being displaced by Mapuches.[13] While being outside traditional Huilliche territory the western Patagonian volcanoes Michimahuida, Hornopirén and Chaitén have Huilliche etymologies.[12]

In Chubut Province modern toponymy comes from the word "chupat" belonging to a transitional language between the southern and northern Tehuelche ethnic groups that were located in that region called Tewsün or Teushen. The word means transparency and is related to the clarity and purity of the river that bears that name and runs through the province. It is also related to the origin of the Welsh pronunciation of the word "chupat" which later became "Chubut". It is called "Camwy" in Patagonian Welsh. Chupat, Chubut and Camwy have the same meaning and are used to talk about the river and the province. Welsh settlers and placenames are associated with one of the projects of the country of Wales, Project Hiraeth.[14]

Due to the language, culture and location, many Patagonians do not consider themselves Latinos and proudly call themselves Patagonians instead. People from Y Wladfa, Laurie Island, the Atlantic Islands, Antarctica (including the Chilean town in Antarctica, "The Stars Village", and the Argentine civilian settlement, "Hope Base"), other non-latin speaking areas use this term as a patriotic and inclusive demonym. A Patagonian is a person that is part of the Patagonia region, language and culture. That person could be a citizen from Chilean Patagonia, Argentine Patagonia, or of native communities that existed before the land was divided by The Boundary Treaty of 1881.

Patagonia is divided between Western Patagonia (Chile) and Eastern Patagonia (Argentina) and several territories are still under dispute and claiming their rights. Mapuche people came from the Chilean Andes and voted to remain in different sides of Patagonia. Welsh settlers came from Wales and North America and voted to remain in Patagonia; when the treaty was signed, they voted for culture and administration to be apart from the country keeping the settlement, language, schools, traditions, regional dates, flag, anthems, and celebrations. Patagonians also live abroad in settlements like Saltcoats, Saskatchewan, Canada; New South Wales, Australia; South Africa; the Falkland Islands; and North America.[citation needed]

Population and land area edit

Largest cities edit

City Population Province / Region Country
Neuquén 377,500 (Metropolitan area) Neuquén Province Argentina
Temuco 200,529 (Metropolitan area) Araucanía Region Chile
Comodoro Rivadavia 182,631 Chubut Province Argentina
Puerto Montt 169,736 (Metropolitan area) Los Lagos Region Chile
Valdivia 150,048 Los Ríos Region Chile
Osorno 147,666 Los Lagos Region Chile
Punta Arenas 123,403 Magallanes Region Chile
General Roca 120,883 Río Negro Province Argentina
Puerto Madryn 115,353 Chubut Province Argentina
San Carlos de Bariloche 112,887[15] Río Negro Province Argentina
Santa Rosa 103,241 La Pampa Province Argentina
Trelew 97,915 Chubut Province Argentina
Río Gallegos 95,796 Santa Cruz Province Argentina
Viedma 80,632 Río Negro Province Argentina
Ushuaia 77,819 Tierra del Fuego Province Argentina
Río Grande 67,038 Tierra del Fuego Province Argentina
Coyhaique 49,667 Aysén Region Chile
Esquel 34,900 Chubut Province Argentina
Pucón 28,923 Araucanía Region Chile

Physical geography edit

 
Río Negro Province, Argentina

Argentine Patagonia is for the most part a region of steppe-like plains, rising in a succession of 13 abrupt terraces about 100 m (330 ft) at a time, and covered with an enormous bed of shingle almost bare of vegetation.[16][17] In the hollows of the plains are ponds or lakes of fresh and brackish water. Towards Chilean territory, the shingle gives way to porphyry, granite, and basalt lavas, and animal life becomes more abundant.[16] Vegetation is more luxuriant, consisting principally of southern beech and conifers. The high rainfall against the western Andes (Wet Andes) and the low sea-surface temperatures offshore give rise to cold and humid air masses, contributing to the ice fields and glaciers, the largest ice fields in the Southern Hemisphere outside of Antarctica.[17]

Among the depressions by which the plateau is intersected transversely, the principal ones are the Gualichu, south of the Río Negro, the Maquinchao and Valcheta (through which previously flowed the waters of Nahuel Huapi Lake, which now feed the Limay River), the Senguerr (spelled Senguer on most Argentine maps and within the corresponding region), and the Deseado River. Besides these transverse depressions (some of them marking lines of ancient interoceanic communication), others were occupied by either more or less extensive lakes, such as the Yagagtoo, Musters, and Colhue Huapi, and others situated to the south of Puerto Deseado in the center of the country.[16]

Across much of Patagonia east of the Andes, volcanic eruptions have created formation of basaltic lava plateaus during the Cenozoic.[18] The plateaus are of different ages with the older –of Neogene and Paleogene age– being located at higher elevations than Pleistocene and Holocene lava plateaus and outcrops.[18]

Erosion, which is caused principally by the sudden melting and retreat of ice aided by tectonic changes, has scooped out a deep longitudinal depression, best in evidence where in contact with folded Cretaceous rocks, which are lifted up by the Cenozoic granite. It generally separates the plateau from the first lofty hills, whose ridges are generally called the pre-Cordillera. To the west of these, a similar longitudinal depression extends all along the foot of the snowy Andean Cordillera. This latter depression contains the richest, most fertile land of Patagonia.[16] Lake basins along the Cordillera were also gradually excavated by ice streams, including Lake Argentino and Lake Fagnano, as well as coastal bays such as Bahía Inútil.[17]

The establishment of dams near the Andes in Argentina in the 20th century has led to a sediment shortage along the Atlantic coast of Patagonia.[19]

Geology edit

 
Ainsworth Bay and Marinelli Glacier, Chile

The geological limit of Patagonia has been proposed to be Huincul Fault, which forms a major discontinuity. The fault truncates various structures including the Pampean orogen found further north. The ages of base rocks change abruptly across the fault.[20] Discrepancies have been mentioned among geologists on the origin of the Patagonian landmass. Víctor Ramos has proposed that the Patagonian landmass originated as an allochthonous terrane that separated from Antarctica and docked in South America 250 to 270 Mya in the Permian period.[21] A 2014 study by R.J. Pankhurst and coworkers rejects any idea of a far-traveled Patagonia, claiming it is likely of parautochtonous (nearby) origin.[22]

The Mesozoic and Cenozoic deposits have revealed a most interesting vertebrate fauna. This, together with the discovery of the perfect cranium of a turtle (chelonian) of the genus Niolamia, which is almost identical to Ninjemys oweni of the Pleistocene age in Queensland, forms an evident proof of the connection between the Australian and South American continents. The Patagonian Niolamia belongs to the Sarmienti Formation.[23] Fossils of the mid-Cretaceous Argentinosaurus, which may be the largest of all dinosaurs, have been found in Patagonia, and a model of the mid-Jurassic Piatnitzkysaurus graces the concourse of the Trelew airport (the skeleton is in the Trelew paleontological museum; the museum's staff has also announced the discovery of a species of dinosaur even bigger than Argentinosaurus[24]). Of more than paleontological interest,[25] the middle Jurassic Los Molles Formation and the still richer late Jurassic (Tithonian) and early Cretaceous (Berriasian) Vaca Muerta formation above it in the Neuquén basin are reported to contain huge hydrocarbon reserves (mostly gas in Los Molles, both gas and oil in Vaca Muerta) partly accessible through hydraulic fracturing.[26] Other specimens of the interesting fauna of Patagonia, belonging to the Middle Cenozoic, are the gigantic wingless birds, exceeding in size any hitherto known, and the singular mammal Pyrotherium, also of very large dimensions. In the Cenozoic marine formation, considerable numbers of cetaceans have been discovered.

During the Oligocene and early Miocene, large swathes of Patagonia were subject to a marine transgression, which might have temporarily linked the Pacific and Atlantic Oceans, as inferred from the findings of marine invertebrate fossils of both Atlantic and Pacific affinity in La Cascada Formation.[27][28] Connection would have occurred through narrow epicontinental seaways that formed channels in a dissected topography.[27][29] The Antarctic Plate started to subduct beneath South America 14 million years ago in the Miocene, forming the Chile Triple Junction. At first, the Antarctic Plate subducted only in the southernmost tip of Patagonia, meaning that the Chile Triple Junction was located near the Strait of Magellan. As the southern part of the Nazca Plate and the Chile Rise became consumed by subduction, the more northerly regions of the Antarctic Plate began to subduct beneath Patagonia so that the Chile Triple Junction advanced to the north over time.[30] The asthenospheric window associated to the triple junction disturbed previous patterns of mantle convection beneath Patagonia inducing an uplift of c. 1 km that reversed the Miocene transgression.[29][31]

Political divisions edit

At a state level, Patagonia visually occupies an area within two countries: approximately 10% in Chile and approximately 90% in Argentina.[32] Both countries have organized their Patagonian territories into nonequivalent administrative subdivisions: provinces and departments in Argentina, as well as regions, provinces, and communes in Chile. As Chile is a unitary state, its first-level administrative divisions—the regions—enjoy far less autonomy than analogous Argentine provinces. Argentine provinces have elected governors and legislatures, while Chilean regions had government-appointed intendants prior to the adoption of elected governors from 2021.

The Patagonian Provinces of Argentina are Neuquén, Río Negro, Chubut, Santa Cruz, and Tierra del Fuego. The southernmost part of Buenos Aires Province can also be considered part of Patagonia.

The two Chilean regions undisputedly located entirely within Patagonia are Aysén and Magallanes. Palena Province, a part of the Los Lagos Region, is also located within Patagonia. By some definitions, Chiloé Archipelago, the rest of the Los Lagos Region, and part of the Los Ríos Region are also part of Patagonia.

Climate edit

 
View of Punta Arenas, Chile, in winter

Patagonia's climate is mostly cool and dry year round. The east coast is warmer than the west, especially in summer, as a branch of the southern equatorial current reaches its shores, whereas the west coast is washed by a cold current. However, winters are colder on the inland plateaus east of the slopes and further down the coast on the southeast end of the Patagonian region. For example, at Puerto Montt, on the inlet behind Chiloé Island, the mean annual temperature is 11 °C (52 °F) and the average extremes are 25.5 and −1.5 °C (77.9 and 29.3 °F), whereas at Bahía Blanca near the Atlantic coast and just outside the northern confines of Patagonia, the annual temperature is 15 °C (59 °F) and the range much greater, as temperatures above 35 °C and below −5 °C are recorded every year. At Punta Arenas, in the extreme south, the mean temperature is 6 °C (43 °F) and the average extremes are 24.5 and −2 °C (76.1 and 28.4 °F). The prevailing winds are westerly, and the westward slope has a much heavier precipitation than the eastern in a rainshadow effect;[33][17] the western islands close to Torres del Paine receive an annual precipitation of 4,000 to 7,000 mm, whilst the eastern hills are less than 800 mm and the plains may be as low as 200 mm annual precipitation.[17]

Precipitation is highly seasonal in northwestern Patagonia. For example, Villa La Angostura in Argentina, close to the border with Chile, receives up to 434 mm of rain and snow in May, 297 mm in June, and 273 in July, compared to 80 in February and 72 in March. The total for the city is 2074 mm, making it one of the rainiest in Argentina. Further west, some areas receive up to 4,000 mm and more, especially on the Chilean side. In the northeast, the seasons for rain are reversed; most rain falls from occasional summer thunderstorms but totals barely reach 500 mm in the northeast corner, and rapidly decrease to less than 300 mm. The Patagonian west coast, which belongs exclusively to Chile, has a cool oceanic climate, with summer maximum temperatures ranging from 14 °C in the south to 19 °C in the north (and nights between 5 and 11 °C) and very high precipitation, from 2,000 to more than 7,000 mm in local microclimates. Snow is uncommon at the coast in the north but happens more often in the south, and frost is usually not very intense.[citation needed]

Immediately east from the coast are the Andes, cut by deep fjords in the south and by deep lakes in the north, and with varying temperatures according to the altitude. The tree line ranges from close to 2,000 m on the northern side (except for the Andes in northern Neuquén in Argentina, where sunnier and dryer conditions allow trees to grow up to close to 3,000 m), and diminishes southward to only 600–800 m in Tierra del Fuego. Precipitation changes dramatically from one spot to the other and diminishes very quickly eastward. An example of this is Laguna Frías, in Argentina, which receives 4,400 mm yearly. The city of Bariloche, about 40 km further east, receives about 1,000 mm, and the airport, another 15 km east, receives less than 600 mm. The easterly slopes of the Andes are home to several Argentine cities: San Martín de los Andes, Bariloche, El Bolsón, Esquel, and El Calafate. Temperatures there are milder in the summer (in the north, between 20 and 24 °C, with cold nights between 4 and 9 °C; in the south, summers are between 16 and 20 °C, at night temperatures are similar to the north) and much colder in the winter, with frequent snowfall (although snow cover rarely lasts very long). Daytime highs range from 3 to 9 °C in the north, and from 0 to 7 °C in the south, whereas nights range from −5 to 2 °C everywhere. Cold waves can bring much colder values; a temperature of −25 °C has been recorded in Bariloche, and most places can often have temperatures between −12 and −15 °C and highs staying around 0 °C for a few days.[citation needed]

 
Santa Cruz Province

Directly east of these areas, the weather becomes much harsher; precipitation drops to between 150 and 300 mm, the mountains no longer protect the cities from the wind, and temperatures become more extreme. Maquinchao is a few hundred kilometers east of Bariloche, at the same altitude on a plateau, and summer daytime temperatures are usually about 5 °C warmer, rising up to 35 °C sometimes, but winter temperatures are much more extreme: the record is −35 °C, and some nights not uncommonly reach 10 °C colder than Bariloche. The plateaus in Santa Cruz province and parts of Chubut usually have snow cover through the winter, and often experience very cold temperatures. In Chile, the city of Balmaceda is known for being situated in this region (which is otherwise almost exclusively in Argentina), and for being the coldest place in Chile. In 2017, temperatures even dropped down to −20 °C in the region.[34]

The northern Atlantic coast has warm summers (28 to 32 °C, but with relatively cool nights at 15 °C) and mild winters, with highs around 12 °C and lows about 2–3 °C. Occasionally, temperatures reach −10 or 40 °C, and rainfall is very scarce. The weather only gets a bit colder further south in Chubut, and the city of Comodoro Rivadavia has summer temperatures of 24 to 28 °C, nights of 12 to 16 °C, and winters with days around 10 °C and nights around 3 °C, and less than 250 mm of rain. However, a drastic drop occurs as one moves south to Santa Cruz; Rio Gallegos, in the south of the province, has summer temps of 17 to 21 °C, (nights between 6 and 10 °C) and winter temperatures of 2 to 6 °C, with nights between −5 and 0 °C, despite being right on the coast. Snowfall is common despite the dryness, and temperatures are known to fall to under −18 °C and to remain below freezing for several days in a row. Rio Gallegos is also among the windiest places on Earth, with winds reaching 100 km/h occasionally.[citation needed]

Tierra del Fuego is extremely wet in the west, relatively damp in the south, and dry in the north and east. Summers are cool (13 to 18 °C in the north, 12 to 16 °C in the south, with nights generally between 3 and 8 °C), cloudy in the south, and very windy. Winters are dark and cold, but without the extreme temperatures in the south and west (Ushuaia rarely reaches −10 °C, but hovers around 0 °C for several months, and snow can be heavy). In the east and north, winters are much more severe, with cold snaps bringing temperatures down to −20 °C all the way to the Rio Grande on the Atlantic coast. Snow can fall even in the summer in most areas, as well.[35][36]

Fauna edit

 
Black-browed albatross, near Ushuaia

The guanaco (Lama guanicoe), South American cougar (Puma concolor concolor), the Patagonian fox (Lycalopex griseus), Patagonian hog-nosed skunk (Conepatus humboldtii), and Magellanic tuco-tuco (Ctenomys magellanicus; a subterranean rodent) are the most characteristic mammals of the Patagonian plains.[33] The Patagonian steppe is one of the last strongholds of the guanaco and Darwin's rheas (Rhea pennata),[37] which had been hunted for their skins by the Tehuelches, on foot using boleadoras, before the diffusion of firearms and horses;[38] they were formerly the chief means of subsistence for the natives, who hunted them on horseback with dogs and bolas. Vizcachas (Lagidum spp.) and the Patagonian mara[37] (Dolichotis patagonum) are also characteristic of the steppe and the pampas to the north.

Bird life is often abundant. The crested caracara (Caracara plancus) is one of the characteristic objects of a Patagonian landscape; the presence of austral parakeets (Enicognathus ferrugineus) as far south as the shores of the strait attracted the attention of the earlier navigators, and green-backed firecrowns (Sephanoides sephaniodes), a species of hummingbird, may be seen flying amid the snowfall. One of the largest birds in the world, the Andean condor (Vultur gryphus) can be seen in Patagonia.[39] Of the many kinds of waterfowl[37] the Chilean flamingo (Phoenicopterus chilensis), the upland goose (Chloephaga picta), and in the strait, the remarkable steamer ducks are found.[33]

Signature marine fauna include the southern right whale, the Magellanic penguin (Spheniscus magellanicus), the killer whale, and elephant seals. The Valdés Peninsula is a UNESCO World Heritage Site, designated for its global significance as a site for the conservation of marine mammals.[40]

The Patagonian freshwater fish fauna is relatively restricted compared to other similar Southern Hemisphere regions. The Argentine part is home to a total of 29 freshwater fish species, 18 of which are native.[41] The introduced are several species of trout, common carp, and various species that originated in more northerly parts of South America. The natives are osmeriforms (Aplochiton and Galaxias), temperate perches (Percichthys), catfish (Diplomystes, Hatcheria and Trichomycterus), Neotropical silversides (Odontesthes) and characiforms (Astyanax, Cheirodon, Gymnocharacinus, and Oligosarcus).[41] Other Patagonian freshwater fauna include the highly unusual aeglid crustaceans.[42]

History edit

Pre-Columbian Patagonia (10,000 BC – AD 1520) edit

 
Map of the indigenous peoples of Southern Patagonia

Human habitation of the region dates back thousands of years,[43] with some early archaeological findings in the area dated to at least the 13th millennium BC, although later dates around the 10th millennium BC are more securely recognized. Evidence exists of human activity at Monte Verde in Llanquihue Province, Chile, dated to around 12,500 BC.[17] The glacial-period ice fields and subsequent large meltwater streams would have made settlement difficult at that time.

The region seems to have been inhabited continuously since 10,000 BC, by various cultures and alternating waves of migration, the details of which are as yet poorly understood. Several sites have been excavated, notably caves such as Cueva del Milodon[44] in Última Esperanza in southern Patagonia, and Tres Arroyos on Tierra del Fuego, that support this date.[17] Hearths, stone scrapers, and animal remains dated to 9400–9200 BC have been found east of the Andes.[17]

 
Cueva de las Manos site in Santa Cruz, Argentina

The Cueva de las Manos is a famous site in Santa Cruz, Argentina. This cave at the foot of a cliff is covered in wall paintings, particularly the negative images of hundreds of hands, believed to date from around 8000 BC.[17]

Based on artifacts found in the region, apparently hunting of guanaco, and to a lesser extent rhea (ñandú), were the primary food sources of tribes living on the eastern plains.[17] Whether the megafauna of Patagonia, including the ground sloth and horse, were extinct in the area before the arrival of humans is unclear, although this is now the more widely accepted account.[citation needed] It is also not clear if domestic dogs were part of early human activity. Bolas are commonly found and were used to catch guanaco and rhea.[17] A maritime tradition existed along the Pacific coast,[45] whose latest exponents were the Yaghan (Yámana) to the south of Tierra del Fuego, the Kaweshqar between Taitao Peninsula and Tierra del Fuego, and the Chono people in the Chonos Archipelago.[citation needed] The Selk'nam, Haush, and Tehuelche are generally thought to be culturally and linguistically related peoples physically distinct from the sea-faring peoples.[46]

It is possible that Isla Grande de Tierra del Fuego was connected to the mainland in the Early Holocene (c. 9000 years BP) much in the same way that Riesco Island was back then.[47] A Selk'nam tradition recorded by the Salesian missionary Giuseppe María Beauvoir relate that the Selk'nam arrived in Tierra del Fuego by land, and that the Selk'nam were later unable to return north as the sea had flooded their crossing.[48]

Agriculture was practised in Pre-Hispanic Argentina as far south as southern Mendoza Province.[49] Agriculture was at times practised beyond this limit in nearby areas of Patagonia but populations reverted at times to non-agricultural lifestyles.[49] By the time of the Spanish arrival to the area (1550s) there is no record of agriculture being practised in northern Patagonia.[49] The extensive Patagonian grasslands and an associated abundance of guanaco game may have contributed for the indigenous populations to favour a hunter-gathered lifestyle.[49]

The indigenous peoples of the region included the Tehuelches, whose numbers and society were reduced to near extinction not long after the first contacts with Europeans. Tehuelches included the Gununa'kena to the north, Mecharnuekenk in south-central Patagonia, and the Aonikenk or Southern Tehuelche in the far south, north of the Magellan strait. On Isla Grande de Tierra del Fuego, the Selk'nam (Ona) and Haush (Manek'enk) lived in the north and southeast, respectively. In the archipelagos to the south of Tierra del Fuego were Yámana, with the Kawéskar (Alakaluf) in the coastal areas and islands in western Tierra del Fuego and the southwest of the mainland.[17] In the Patagonian archipelagoes north of Taitao Peninsula lived the Chonos. These groups were encountered in the first periods of European contact with different lifestyles, body decoration, and language, although it is unclear when this configuration emerged.

Towards the end of the 16th century, Mapuche-speaking agriculturalists penetrated the western Andes and from there across into the eastern plains and down to the far south. Through confrontation and technological ability, they came to dominate the other peoples of the region in a short period of time, and are the principal indigenous community today.[17]

Early European exploration (1520–1669) edit

 
Nao Victoria, the replica of the first ship to pass through the Strait of Magellan

Navigators such as Gonçalo Coelho and Amerigo Vespucci possibly had reached the area (his own account of 1502 has it that they reached the latitude 52°S), but Vespucci's failure to accurately describe the main geographical features of the region such as the Río de la Plata casts doubts on whether they really did so.

The first or more detailed description of part of the coastline of Patagonia is possibly mentioned in a Portuguese voyage in 1511–1512, traditionally attributed to captain Diogo Ribeiro, who after his death was replaced by Estevão de Frois, and was guided by the pilot and cosmographer João de Lisboa). The explorers, after reaching Rio de la Plata (which they would explore on the return voyage, contacting the Charrúa and other peoples) eventually reached San Matias Gulf, at 42°S. The expedition reported that after going south of the 40th parallel, they found a "land" or a "point extending into the sea", and further south, a gulf. The expedition is said to have rounded the gulf for nearly 300 km (186 mi) and sighted the continent on the southern side of the gulf.[50][51]

The Atlantic coast of Patagonia was first fully explored in 1520 by the Spanish expedition led by Ferdinand Magellan, who on his passage along the coast named many of its more striking features – San Matías Gulf, Cape of 11,000 Virgins (now simply Cape Virgenes), and others.[33] Magellan's fleet spent a difficult winter at what he named Puerto San Julián before resuming its voyage further south on 21 August 1520. During this time, it encountered the local inhabitants, likely to be Tehuelche people, described by his reporter, Antonio Pigafetta, as giants called Patagons.[52]

The territory became the Spanish colony of the Governorate of New Léon, granted in 1529 to Governor Simón de Alcazaba y Sotomayor [es], part of the Governorates of the Spanish Empire of the Americas. The territory was redefined in 1534 and consisted of the southernmost part of the South American continent and the islands towards Antarctica.

Rodrigo de Isla, sent inland in 1535 from San Matías by Simón de Alcazaba y Sotomayor (on whom western Patagonia had been conferred by Charles I of Spain, is presumed to have been the first European to have traversed the great Patagonian plain. If the men under his charge had not mutinied, he might have crossed the Andes to reach the Pacific coast.

Pedro de Mendoza, on whom the country was next bestowed, founded Buenos Aires, but did not venture south. Alonso de Camargo [es] (1539), Juan Ladrilleros (1557), and Hurtado de Mendoza (1558) helped to make known the Pacific coasts, and while Sir Francis Drake's voyage in 1577 down the Atlantic coast, through the Strait of Magellan and northward along the Pacific coast, was memorable,[33] yet the descriptions of the geography of Patagonia owe much more to the Spanish explorer Pedro Sarmiento de Gamboa (1579–1580), who, devoting himself especially to the south-west region, made careful and accurate surveys. The settlements that he founded at Nombre de Jesús and San Felipe was neglected by the Spanish government, the latter being abandoned before Thomas Cavendish visited it in 1587 during his circumnavigation, and so desolate that he called it Port Famine.[33] After the discovery of the route around Cape Horn, the Spanish Crown lost interest in southern Patagonia until the 18th century, when the coastal settlements Carmen de Patagones, San José, Puerto Deseado, and Nueva Colonia Floridablanca were established, although it maintained its claim of a de jure sovereignty over the area.

In 1669, the district around Puerto Deseado was explored by John Davis and was claimed in 1670 by Sir John Narborough for King Charles II of England, but the English made no attempt to establish settlements or explore the interior.

Patagonian giants: early European perceptions edit

The first European explorers of Patagonia observed that the indigenous people in the region were taller than the average Europeans of the time, prompting some of them to believe that Patagonians were giants.

According to Antonio Pigafetta,[7] one of the Magellan expedition's few survivors and its published chronicler, Magellan bestowed the name Patagão (or Patagón) on the inhabitants they encountered there, and the name "Patagonia" for the region. Although Pigafetta's account does not describe how this name came about, subsequent popular interpretations gave credence to a derivation meaning "land of the big feet". However, this etymology is questionable. The term is most likely derived from an actual character name, "Patagón", a savage creature confronted by Primaleón of Greece, the hero in the homonymous Spanish chivalry novel (or knight-errantry tale) by Francisco Vázquez.[53] This book, published in 1512, was the sequel of the romance Palmerín de Oliva;it was much in vogue at the time, and a favorite reading of Magellan. Magellan's perception of the natives, dressed in skins, and eating raw meat, clearly recalled the uncivilized Patagón in Vázquez's book. Novelist and travel writer Bruce Chatwin suggests etymological roots of both Patagon and Patagonia in his book, In Patagonia,[54] noting the similarity between "Patagon" and the Greek word παταγος,[citation needed] which means "a roaring" or "gnashing of teeth" (in his chronicle, Pigafetta describes the Patagonians as "roaring like bulls").

 
An 1840s illustration of indigenous Patagonians from near the Straits of Magellan, from Voyage au pole sud et dans l'Océanie by French explorer Jules Dumont d'Urville

The main interest in the region sparked by Pigafetta's account came from his reports of their meeting with the local inhabitants, whom they claimed to measure some 9 to 12 feet in height – "so tall that we reached only to his waist" – hence the later idea that Patagonia meant "big feet". This supposed race of Patagonian giants or Patagones entered into the common European perception of this then little-known and distant area, to be further fueled by subsequent reports of other expeditions and famous travelers such as Sir Francis Drake, which seemed to confirm these accounts.[citation needed] Early charts of the New World sometimes added the legend regio gigantum ("region of the giants") to the Patagonian area. By 1611, the Patagonian god Setebos (Settaboth in Pigafetta) was familiar to the hearers of The Tempest.[33]

The concept and general belief persisted for a further 250 years and was to be sensationally reignited in 1767 when an "official" (but anonymous) account was published of Commodore John Byron's recent voyage of global circumnavigation in HMS Dolphin. Byron and crew had spent some time along the coast, and the publication (Voyage Round the World in His Majesty's Ship the Dolphin) seemed to give proof positive of their existence; the publication became an overnight bestseller, thousands of extra copies were to be sold to a willing public, and other prior accounts of the region were hastily republished (even those in which giant-like folk were not mentioned at all).

However, the Patagonian giant frenzy died down substantially only a few years later, when some more sober and analytical accounts were published. In 1773, John Hawkesworth published on behalf of the Admiralty a compendium of noted English southern-hemisphere explorers' journals, including that of James Cook and John Byron. In this publication, drawn from their official logs, the people Byron's expedition had encountered clearly were no taller than 6-foot-6-inch (1.98 m), very tall but by no means giants. Interest soon subsided, although awareness of and belief in the concept persisted in some quarters even into the 20th century.[55]

Spanish outposts edit

The Spanish failure at colonizing the Strait of Magellan made Chiloé Archipelago assume the role of protecting the area of western Patagonia from foreign intrusions.[56] Valdivia, reestablished in 1645, and Chiloé acted as sentries, being hubs where the Spanish collected information and rumors from all over Patagonia.[57]

As a result of the corsair and pirate menace, Spanish authorities ordered the depopulation of the Guaitecas Archipelago to deprive enemies of any eventual support from native populations.[11] This then led to the transfer of the majority of the indigenous Chono population to the Chiloé Archipelago in the north while some Chonos moved south of Taitao Peninsula effectively depopulating the territory in the 18th century.[11]

The publication of Thomas Falkner's book A Description of Patagonia and the Adjacent Parts of South America in England fuelled speculations in Spain about renewed British interest in Patagonia. In response an order from the King of Spain was issued to settle the eastern coast of Patagonia.[58] This led to the brief existence of colonies at the Gulf of San Jorge (1778–1779) and San Julián (1780–1783) and the more longlasting colony of Carmen de Patagones.[58]

Scientific exploration (1764–1842) edit

In the second half of the 18th century, European knowledge of Patagonia was further augmented by the voyages of the previously mentioned John Byron (1764–1765), Samuel Wallis (1766, in the same HMS Dolphin which Byron had earlier sailed in) and Louis Antoine de Bougainville (1766). Thomas Falkner, a Jesuit who resided near forty years in those parts, published his Description of Patagonia (Hereford, 1774); Francisco Viedma founded El Carmen, nowadays Carmen de Patagones and Antonio settled the area of San Julian Bay, where he founded the colony of Floridablanca and advanced inland to the Andes (1782). Basilio Villarino ascended the Rio Negro (1782).[33]

 
Tehuelche warriors in Patagonia

Two hydrographic surveys of the coasts were of first-rate importance; the first expedition (1826–1830) included HMS Adventure and HMS Beagle under Phillip Parker King, and the second (1832–1836) was the voyage of the Beagle under Robert FitzRoy. The latter expedition is particularly noted for the participation of Charles Darwin, who spent considerable time investigating various areas of Patagonia onshore, including long rides with gauchos in Río Negro, and who joined FitzRoy in a 200 mi (320 km) expedition taking ships' boats up the course of the Santa Cruz River.[33]

Spanish American independence wars edit

During the independence wars rumours about the imminent arrival of Spanish troops to Patagonia, either from Peru or Chiloé, were common among indigenous peoples of the Pampas and northern Patagonia.[59] In 1820 Chilean patriot leader José Miguel Carrera allied with the indigenous Ranquel people of the Pampas in order to fight the rival patriots in Buenos Aires.[59] José Miguel Carrera ultimately planned to cross the Andes into Chile and oust his rivals in Chile.

The last royalist armed group in what is today Argentina and Chile, the Pincheira brothers, moved from the vicinities of Chillán across the Andes into northern Patagonia as patriots consolidated control of Chile. The Pincheira brothers was an outlaw gang made of Europeans Spanish, American Spanish, Mestizos and local indigenous peoples.[60] This group was able to move to Patagonia thanks to its alliance with two indigenous tribes, the Ranqueles and the Boroanos.[60][59] In the interior of Patagonia, far from the de facto territory of Chile and the United Provinces, the Pincheira brothers established permanent encampment with thousands of settlers.[60] From their bases the Pincheiras led numerous raids into the countryside of the newly established republics.[59]

Chilean and Argentine colonization (1843–1902) edit

 
In blue and green are the boundaries claimed by Argentinian[61] and Chilean[62][63][64][65] historians respectably as uti possidetis iuris in Patagonia.

In the early 19th century, the araucanization of the natives of northern Patagonia intensified, and many Mapuches migrated to Patagonia to live as nomads that raised cattle or pillaged the Argentine countryside. The cattle stolen in the incursions (malones) were later taken to Chile through the mountain passes and traded for goods, especially alcoholic beverages. The main trail for this trade was called Camino de los chilenos and runs a length around 1000 km from the Buenos Aires Province to the mountain passes of Neuquén Province. The lonco Calfucurá crossed the Andes from Chile to the pampas around 1830, after a call from the governor of Buenos Aires, Juan Manuel de Rosas, to fight the Boroano people. In 1859, he attacked Bahía Blanca in Argentina with 3,000 warriors. As in the case of Calfucura, many other bands of Mapuches got involved in the internal conflicts of Argentina until Conquest of the Desert. To counter the cattle raids, a trench called the Zanja de Alsina was built by Argentina in the pampas in the 1870s.

 
Map of the advance of the Argentine frontier until the establishment of zanja de Alsina

In the mid-19th century, the newly independent nations of Argentina and Chile began an aggressive phase of expansion into the south, increasing confrontation with the Indigenous peoples of the region. In 1860, French adventurer Orelie-Antoine de Tounens proclaimed himself king of the Kingdom of Araucanía and Patagonia of the Mapuche.

Following the last instructions of Bernardo O'Higgins, the Chilean president Manuel Bulnes sent an expedition to the Strait of Magellan and founded Fuerte Bulnes in 1843. Five years later, the Chilean government moved the main settlement to the current location of Punta Arenas, the oldest permanent settlement in Southern Patagonia. The creation of Punta Arenas was instrumental in making Chile's claim of the Strait of Magellan permanent. In the 1860s, sheep from the Falkland Islands were introduced to the lands around the Straits of Magellan, and throughout the 19th century, sheepfarming grew to be the most important economic sector in southern Patagonia.[citation needed]

George Chaworth Musters in 1869 wandered in company with a band of Tehuelches through the whole length of the country from the strait to the Manzaneros in the northwest, and collected a great deal of information about the people and their mode of life.[33][66]

Conquest of the Desert and the 1881 treaty edit

 
Territorial losses of the Republic of Chile de jure (by law) according to Chilean historiography.[62]
 
Under General Roca, the Conquest of the Desert extended Argentine power into Patagonia

Argentine authorities worried that the strong connections araucanized tribes had with Chile would allegedly give Chile certain influence over the pampas.[67] Argentine authorities feared that in an eventual war with Chile over Patagonia, the natives would side with the Chileans and the war would be brought to the vicinity of Buenos Aires.[67]

The decision to plan and execute the Conquest of the Desert was probably catalyzed by the 1872 attack of Cufulcurá and his 6,000 followers on the cities of General Alvear, Veinticinco de Mayo, and Nueve de Julio, where 300 criollos were killed, and 200,000 heads of cattle taken. In the 1870s, the Conquest of the Desert was a controversial campaign by the Argentine government, executed mainly by General Julio Argentino Roca, to subdue or, some claim, to exterminate the native peoples of the south.

In 1885, a mining expeditionary party under the Romanian adventurer Julius Popper landed in southern Patagonia in search of gold, which they found after traveling southwards towards the lands of Tierra del Fuego. This led to the further opening up of the area to prospectors. European missionaries and settlers arrived throughout the 19th and 20th centuries, notably the Welsh settlement of the Chubut Valley. Numerous Croatians also settled in Patagonia.[68]

During the first years of the 20th century, the border between the two nations in Patagonia was established by the mediation of the British crown. Numerous modifications have been made since then, the last conflict having been resolved in 1994 by an arbitration tribunal constituted in Rio de Janeiro. It granted Argentina sovereignty over the Southern Patagonia Icefield, Cerro Fitz Roy, and Laguna del Desierto.[69][70][circular reference]

Until 1902, a large proportion of Patagonia's population were natives of Chiloé Archipelago (Chilotes), who worked as peons in large livestock-farming estancias. Because they were manual laborers, their social status was below that of the gauchos and the Argentine, Chilean, and European landowners and administrators.

Before and after 1902, when the boundaries were drawn, Argentina expelled many Chilotes from their territory, as they feared that having a large Chilean population in Argentina could pose a risk to their future control. These workers founded the first inland Chilean settlement in what is now the Aysén Region;[71][72] Balmaceda. Lacking good grasslands on the forest-covered Chilean side, the immigrants burned down the forest, setting fires that could last more than two years.[72]

Economy edit

 
Tierra del Fuego sheep ranch, 1942: The region's primary activity then, it has been eclipsed by the decline in the global wool market as much as by petroleum and gas extraction.

The area's principal economic activities have been mining, whaling, livestock (notably sheep throughout) agriculture (wheat and fruit production near the Andes towards the north), and oil after its discovery near Comodoro Rivadavia in 1907.[73]

Energy production is also a crucial part of the local economy. Railways were planned to cover continental Argentine Patagonia to serve the oil, mining, agricultural, and energy industries, and a line was built connecting San Carlos de Bariloche to Buenos Aires. Portions of other lines were built to the south, but the only lines still in use are La Trochita in Esquel, the Train of the End of the World in Ushuaia, both heritage lines,[74] and a short run Tren Histórico de Bariloche to Perito Moreno.

In the western forest-covered Patagonian Andes and archipelagoes, wood logging has historically been an important part of the economy; it impelled the colonization of the areas of the Nahuel Huapi and Lácar lakes in Argentina and Guaitecas Archipelago in Chile.

Livestock edit

 
Gauchos mustering sheep in Patagonia

Sheep farming introduced in the late 19th century has been a principal economic activity. After reaching its heights during the First World War, the decline in world wool prices affected sheep farming in Argentina. Nowadays, about half of Argentina's 15 million sheep are in Patagonia, a percentage that is growing as sheep farming disappears in the pampas to the north. Chubut (mainly Merino) is the top wool producer with Santa Cruz (Corriedale and some Merino) second. Sheep farming revived in 2002 with the devaluation of the peso and firmer global demand for wool (led by China and the EU). Still, little investment occurs in new abattoirs (mainly in Comodoro Rivadavia, Trelew, and Rio Gallegos), and often phytosanitary restrictions reduce the export of sheep meat. Extensive valleys in the Cordilleran Range have provided sufficient grazing lands, and the low humidity and weather of the southern region make raising Merino and Corriedale sheep common.

Livestock also includes small numbers of cattle, and in lesser numbers, pigs and horses. Sheep farming provides a small but important number of jobs for rural areas with little other employment.

Tourism edit

 
Whale watching off the Valdes Peninsula

In the second half of the 20th century, tourism became an ever more important part of Patagonia's economy. Originally a remote backpacking destination, the region has attracted increasing numbers of upmarket visitors, cruise passengers rounding Cape Horn or visiting Antarctica, and adventure and activity holiday-makers. Principal tourist attractions include the Perito Moreno glacier, the Valdés Peninsula, the Argentine Lake District and Ushuaia and Tierra del Fuego (the city is also a jumping-off place for travel to Antarctica, bringing in still more visitors). Tourism has created new markets locally and for export for traditional crafts such as Mapuche handicrafts, guanaco textiles, and confectionery and preserves.[73]

A spin-off from increased tourism has been the buying of often enormous tracts of land by foreigners, often as a prestige purchase rather than for agriculture. Buyers have included Sylvester Stallone, Ted Turner, and Christopher Lambert, and most notably Luciano Benetton, Patagonia's largest landowner.[73] His "Compañia de Tierras Sud" has brought new techniques to the ailing sheep-rearing industry and sponsored museums and community facilities, but has been controversial particularly for its treatment of local Mapuche communities.[75]

Energy edit


 
La Trochita on its Chubut Province route: Formerly the sole rapid transport means in the province, La Trochita is now a tourist attraction.

Due to its sparse rainfall in agricultural areas, Argentine Patagonia already has numerous dams for irrigation, some of which are also used for hydropower. The Limay River is used to generate hydroelectricity at five dams built on its course: Alicurá, Piedra del Águila, Pichi Picún Leufú, El Chocón, and Arroyito. Together with the Cerros Colorados Complex on the Neuquén River, they contribute more than one-quarter of the total hydroelectric generation in the country.

Patagonia has always been Argentina's main area, and Chile's only area, of conventional oil and gas production. Oil and gas have played an important role in the rise of Neuquén-Cipolleti as Patagonia's most populous urban area, and in the growth of Comodoro Rivadavia, Punta Arenas, and Rio Grande, as well. The development of the Neuquén basin's enormous unconventional oil and gas reserves through hydraulic fracturing has just begun, but the YPF-Chevron Loma Campana field in the Vaca Muerta formation is already the world's largest producing shale oil field outside North America according to former YPF CEO Miguel Gallucio.

Patagonia's notorious winds have already made the area Argentina's main source of wind power, and plans have been made for major increases in wind power generation. Coal is mined in the Rio Turbio area and used for electricity generation.

Cuisine edit

Argentine Patagonian cuisine is largely the same as the cuisine of Buenos Aires – grilled meats and pasta – with extensive[76] use of local ingredients and less use of those products that have to be imported into the region. Lamb is considered the traditional Patagonian meat, grilled for several hours over an open fire. Some guide books have reported that game meats, especially guanaco and introduced deer and boar, are popular in restaurant cuisine. However, since guanaco is a protected animal in both Chile and Argentina, it is unlikely to appear commonly as restaurant fare. Trout and centolla (king crab) are also common, though overfishing of centolla has made it increasingly scarce. In the area around Bariloche, a noted Alpine cuisine tradition remains, with chocolate bars and even fondue restaurants, and tea rooms are a feature of the Welsh communities in Gaiman and Trevelin, as well as in the mountains.[73] Since the mid-1990s, some success with winemaking has occurred in Argentine Patagonia, especially in Neuquén.

Foreign land buyers issue edit

Foreign investors, including Italian multinational Benetton Group, media magnate Ted Turner, British billionaire Joe Lewis[77] and the conservationist Douglas Tompkins, own major land areas. This situation has caused several conflicts with local inhabitants and the governments of Chile and Argentina, for example, the opposition by Douglas Tompkins to the planned route for Carretera Austral in Pumalín Park. A scandal is also brewing about two properties owned by Ted Turner: the estancia La Primavera, located inside Nahuel Huapi National Park, and the estancia Collón Cura.[77] Benetton has faced criticism from Mapuche organizations, including Mapuche International Link, over its purchase of traditional Mapuche lands in Patagonia. The Curiñanco-Nahuelquir family was evicted from their land in 2002 following Benetton's claim to it, but the land was restored in 2007.[78][79]

In literature edit

In Jules Verne's 1867–1868 novel Les Enfants du capitaine Grant (The Children of Captain Grant, alternatively 'In Search of the Castaways'), the search for Captain Grant gets underway when the Duncan, a vessel in the ownership of Lord Glenarvan, is taken on a journey to the western shore of South America's Patagonian region where the crew is split up, and Lord Glenarvan proceeds to lead a party eastwards across Patagonia to eventually reunite with the Duncan (which had doubled the Cape in the meanwhile).

The future history depicted in Olaf Stapledon's 1930 novel Last and First Men includes a far future time in which Patagonia becomes the center of a new world civilization while Europe and North America are reduced to the status of backward poverty-stricken areas.

In William Goldman’s 1987 movie The Princess Bride, Westley, the current inheritor of the moniker "the Dread Pirate Roberts", states that the "real" (original) Dread Pirate Roberts is retired and "living like a king in Patagonia".

In David Grann's 2023 non-fiction book The Wager: A Tale of Shipwreck, Mutiny and Murder, the surviving crew of HMS Wager are shipwrecked on the Chilean coast of Patagonia, estimating their position to be "at around 47 degrees south and 81:40 degrees west".[80]

See also edit

References edit

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  2. ^ Manuel Enrique Schilling; Richard WalterCarlson; AndrésTassara; Rommulo Vieira Conceição; Gustavo Walter Bertotto; Manuel Vásquez; Daniel Muñoz; Tiago Jalowitzki; Fernanda Gervasoni; Diego Morata (2017). "The origin of Patagonia revealed by Re-Os systematics of mantle xenoliths." Precambrian Research, volumen 294: 15–32.
  3. ^ Zunino, H.; Matossian, B.; Hidalgo, R. (2012). "Poblamiento y desarrollo de enclaves turísticos en la Norpatagonia chileno-argentina. Migración y frontera en un espacio binacional." (Population and development of tourist enclaves in the Chilean-Argentine Norpatagonia. Migration and the border in a binational space), Revista de Geografía Norte Grande, 53: 137–158.
  4. ^ Zunino, M.; Espinoza, L.; Vallejos-Romero A. (2016) Los migrantes por estilo de vida como agentes de transformación en la Norpatagonia chilena, Revista de Estudios Sociales, 55 (2016): 163–176.
  5. ^ Ciudadanía, territorio y desarrollo endógeno: resistencias y mediaciones de las políticas locales en las encrucijadas del neoliberalismo. Pág. 205. Autores: Rubén Zárate, Liliana Artesi, Oscar Madoery. Editor: Editorial Biblos, 2007. ISBN 950-786-616-7, 9789507866166
  6. ^ Cayuqueo, Pedro (2020). Historia secreta mapuche 2. Santiago de Chile: Catalonia. pp. 34–37. ISBN 978-956-324-783-1.
  7. ^ a b Antonio Pigafetta, Relazione del primo viaggio intorno al mondo, 1524: "Il capitano generale nominò questi popoli Patagoni." A Brief Declaration of the Vyage abowte the Worlde by Antonie Pygafetta Vincentine, Rycharde Eden, The Decades of the Newe Worlde or West India, London, William Powell, 1555. The original word was likely in Magellan's native Portuguese (patagão) or the Spanish of his men (patagón). It was later interpreted later as "bigfoot", but the etymology refers to a literary character in a Spanish novel of the early 16th century:

    Patagon, said to be engendred by a beast in the woods, being the strangest, most misshapen, and counterfeit creature in the world. He hath good understanding, is amorous of women, and keepeth company with one of whom, it is said, he was engendred. He hath the face of a Dogge, great ears, which hang down upon his shoulders, his teeth sharp and big, standing out of his mouth very much: his feet are like a Harts, and he runneth wondrous lightly. Such as have seen him, tell marvelous matters of him, because he chaseth ordinarily among the mountains, with two Lyons in a chain like a lease, and a bow in his hand.Anthony Munday, The Famous and Renowned Historie of Primaleon of Greece, 1619, cap.XXXIII: "How Primaleon... found the Grand Patagon".

  8. ^ Fondebrider, Jorge (2003). "Chapter 1 – Ámbitos y voces". Versiones de la Patagonia (in Spanish) (1st ed.). Buenos Aires, Argentina: Emecé Editores S.A. p. 29. ISBN 978-950-04-2498-1.
  9. ^ Robert Silverberg (2011). (PDF). Asimov's Science Fiction. Archived from the original (PDF) on 6 August 2020. Retrieved 12 November 2016. To the voyagers of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, when the average height of an adult European male was just over five feet [1.55 meters], the Patagonians surely must have looked very large, as, to any child, all adults seem colossal. Then, too, an element of understandable human exaggeration must have entered these accounts of men who had traveled so far and endured so much, and the natural wish not to be outdone by one's predecessors helped to produce these repeated fantasies of Goliaths ten feet tall or even more.
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  12. ^ a b Latorre, Guillermo (1998). "Sustrato y superestrato multilingües en la toponimia del extremo sur de Chile" [Multilingual substratum and superstratum in the toponymy of the south of Chile]. Estudios Filológicos (in Spanish). 33: 55–67.
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  14. ^ Stefani, Catalina Lidia (2020). "Una mirada historiográfica sobre la construcción de la toponimia departamental del Territorio Nacional del Chubut". Revista TEFROS. 18 (2): 139–151.
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  16. ^ a b c d Chisholm 1911, p. 899.
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  19. ^ Isla, Federico Ignacio; Isla, Manuel Fermín (2022). "Geological Changes in Coastal Areas of Patagonia, Argentina, and Chile". In Helbling, E. Walter; Narvarte, Maite A.; González, Raul A.; Villafañe, Virginia E. (eds.). Global Change in Atlantic Coastal Patagonian Ecosystems. Natural and Social Sciences of Patagonia. Springer. pp. 73–89. doi:10.1007/978-3-030-86676-1_4. ISBN 978-3-030-86675-4.
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  21. ^ Jaramillo, Jessica (6 April 2014). "Entrevista al Dr. Víctor Alberto Ramos, Premio México Ciencia y Tecnología 2013" (in Spanish). Incluso ahora continúa la discusión sobre el origen de la Patagonia, la cual lleva más de veinte años sin lograr un consenso entre la comunidad científica. Lo que propone el grupo de investigación en el que trabaja el geólogo es que la Patagonia se originó en el continente Antártico, para después separarse y formar parte de Gondwana, alrededor de 250 a 270 millones de años.
  22. ^ Pankhurst, R.J.; Rapela, C.W.; López de Luchi, M.G.; Rapalini, A.E.; Fanning, C.M.; Galindo, C. (2014). "The Gondwana connections of northern Patagonia" (PDF). Journal of the Geological Society, London. 171 (3): 313–328. Bibcode:2014JGSoc.171..313P. doi:10.1144/jgs2013-081. S2CID 53687880.
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  25. ^ Though not without it where the formations surface; see Chacaicosaurus and Mollesaurus from the Los Molles, and Caypullisaurus, Cricosaurus, Geosaurus, Herbstosaurus, and Wenupteryx from the Vaca Muerta.
  26. ^ U.S. Energy Information Administration, Technically Recoverable Shale Oil and Shale Gas Resources: An Assessment of 137 Shale Formations in 41 Countries Outside the United States, June 2013, pp. V-1 through V-13. According to the same study, the Austral (Argentine name) or Magallanes (Chilean name) basin under the southern Patagonian mainland and Tierra del Fuego may also have massive hydrocarbon reserves in early Cretaceous shales; see pp. V-23 and VII-17 in particular. On 21 May 2014, YPF also announced the first oil and gas discovery in the D-129 shale formation of the Golfo San Jorge area in Chubut, and on 14 August 2014, the first shale oil discovery in yet another Cretaceous formation in the Neuquén basin, the Valanginian/Hauterivian Agrio formation; see . Archived from the original on 26 May 2014. Retrieved 27 May 2014., and . Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 18 August 2014.
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  32. ^ "Patagonia Map: Main regions and areas of Patagonia".
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Attribution:

Further reading edit

External links edit

  • Gallery of photos from Patagonia – Jakub Polomski Photography
  • Patagonia Nature Photo Gallery: Landscapes, flora and fauna from Argentina and Chile
  • Patagon Journal, magazine about Patagonia
  • Aborigines of Patagonia

41°S 68°W / 41°S 68°W / -41; -68

patagonia, other, uses, disambiguation, spanish, pronunciation, pataˈɣonja, geographical, region, that, encompasses, southern, south, america, governed, argentina, chile, region, comprises, southern, section, andes, mountains, with, lakes, fjords, temperate, r. For other uses see Patagonia disambiguation Patagonia Spanish pronunciation pataˈɣonja is a geographical region that encompasses the southern end of South America governed by Argentina and Chile The region comprises the southern section of the Andes Mountains with lakes fjords temperate rainforests and glaciers in the west and deserts tablelands and steppes to the east Patagonia is bounded by the Pacific Ocean on the west the Atlantic Ocean to the east and many bodies of water that connect them such as the Strait of Magellan the Beagle Channel and the Drake Passage to the south PatagoniaRegion of South AmericaArea Total1 043 076 km2 402 734 sq mi Population Total1 999 540 Density1 9 km2 5 0 sq mi DemonymPatagonianDemographics LanguagesRioplatense Spanish Chilean Spanish Mapudungun WelshThe Colorado and Barrancas rivers which run from the Andes to the Atlantic are commonly considered the northern limit of Argentine Patagonia 1 The archipelago of Tierra del Fuego is sometimes included as part of Patagonia Most geographers and historians locate the northern limit of Chilean Patagonia at Huincul Fault in Araucania Region 2 3 4 5 At the time of the Spanish arrival Patagonia was inhabited by multiple indigenous tribes In a small portion of northwestern Patagonia indigenous peoples practiced agriculture while in the remaining territory peoples lived as hunter gatherers traveling by foot in eastern Patagonia or by dugout canoe and dalca in the fjords and channels In colonial times indigenous peoples of northeastern Patagonia adopted a horseriding lifestyle 6 While the interest of the Spanish Empire had been chiefly to keep other European powers away from Patagonia independent Chile and Argentina began to colonize the territory slowly over the course of the 19th and early 20th centuries This process brought a decline of the indigenous populations whose lives and habitats were disrupted while at the same time thousands of Europeans Argentines Chilotes and mainland Chileans settled in Patagonia Border disputes between Argentina and Chile were recurrent in the 20th century citation needed The contemporary economy of eastern Patagonia revolves around sheep farming and oil and gas extraction while in western Patagonia fishing salmon aquaculture and tourism dominate Culturally Patagonia has a varied heritage including Criollo Mestizo Indigenous German Croat Italian English Scottish and Welsh influences citation needed Contents 1 Etymology and toponomies 2 Population and land area 2 1 Largest cities 3 Physical geography 3 1 Geology 4 Political divisions 5 Climate 6 Fauna 7 History 7 1 Pre Columbian Patagonia 10 000 BC AD 1520 7 2 Early European exploration 1520 1669 7 2 1 Patagonian giants early European perceptions 7 3 Spanish outposts 7 4 Scientific exploration 1764 1842 7 5 Spanish American independence wars 7 6 Chilean and Argentine colonization 1843 1902 7 6 1 Conquest of the Desert and the 1881 treaty 8 Economy 8 1 Livestock 8 2 Tourism 8 3 Energy 9 Cuisine 10 Foreign land buyers issue 11 In literature 12 See also 13 References 14 Further reading 15 External linksEtymology and toponomies editThe name Patagonia comes from the word patagon 7 Magellan used this term in 1520 to describe the native tribes of the region whom his expedition thought to be giants The people he called the Patagons are now believed to have been the Tehuelche who tended to be taller than Europeans of the time 8 9 Argentine researcher Miguel Doura observed that the name Patagonia possibly derives from the ancient Greek region of modern Turkey called Paphlagonia possible home of the patagon personage in the chivalric romances Primaleon printed in 1512 ten years before Magellan arrived in these southern lands This hypothesis was published in a 2011 New Review of Spanish Philology report 10 There are various placenames in the Chiloe Archipelago with Chono etymologies despite the main indigenous language of the archipelago at the arrival of the Spanish being Mapudungun 11 12 A theory postulated by chronicler Jose Perez Garcia explains this holding that the Cuncos also known as Veliches settled in Chiloe Island in Pre Hispanic times as a consequence of a push from more northern Huilliches who in turn were being displaced by Mapuches 13 While being outside traditional Huilliche territory the western Patagonian volcanoes Michimahuida Hornopiren and Chaiten have Huilliche etymologies 12 In Chubut Province modern toponymy comes from the word chupat belonging to a transitional language between the southern and northern Tehuelche ethnic groups that were located in that region called Tewsun or Teushen The word means transparency and is related to the clarity and purity of the river that bears that name and runs through the province It is also related to the origin of the Welsh pronunciation of the word chupat which later became Chubut It is called Camwy in Patagonian Welsh Chupat Chubut and Camwy have the same meaning and are used to talk about the river and the province Welsh settlers and placenames are associated with one of the projects of the country of Wales Project Hiraeth 14 Due to the language culture and location many Patagonians do not consider themselves Latinos and proudly call themselves Patagonians instead People from Y Wladfa Laurie Island the Atlantic Islands Antarctica including the Chilean town in Antarctica The Stars Village and the Argentine civilian settlement Hope Base other non latin speaking areas use this term as a patriotic and inclusive demonym A Patagonian is a person that is part of the Patagonia region language and culture That person could be a citizen from Chilean Patagonia Argentine Patagonia or of native communities that existed before the land was divided by The Boundary Treaty of 1881 Patagonia is divided between Western Patagonia Chile and Eastern Patagonia Argentina and several territories are still under dispute and claiming their rights Mapuche people came from the Chilean Andes and voted to remain in different sides of Patagonia Welsh settlers came from Wales and North America and voted to remain in Patagonia when the treaty was signed they voted for culture and administration to be apart from the country keeping the settlement language schools traditions regional dates flag anthems and celebrations Patagonians also live abroad in settlements like Saltcoats Saskatchewan Canada New South Wales Australia South Africa the Falkland Islands and North America citation needed Population and land area editLargest cities edit City Population Province Region CountryNeuquen 377 500 Metropolitan area Neuquen Province ArgentinaTemuco 200 529 Metropolitan area Araucania Region ChileComodoro Rivadavia 182 631 Chubut Province ArgentinaPuerto Montt 169 736 Metropolitan area Los Lagos Region ChileValdivia 150 048 Los Rios Region ChileOsorno 147 666 Los Lagos Region ChilePunta Arenas 123 403 Magallanes Region ChileGeneral Roca 120 883 Rio Negro Province ArgentinaPuerto Madryn 115 353 Chubut Province ArgentinaSan Carlos de Bariloche 112 887 15 Rio Negro Province ArgentinaSanta Rosa 103 241 La Pampa Province ArgentinaTrelew 97 915 Chubut Province ArgentinaRio Gallegos 95 796 Santa Cruz Province ArgentinaViedma 80 632 Rio Negro Province ArgentinaUshuaia 77 819 Tierra del Fuego Province ArgentinaRio Grande 67 038 Tierra del Fuego Province ArgentinaCoyhaique 49 667 Aysen Region ChileEsquel 34 900 Chubut Province ArgentinaPucon 28 923 Araucania Region ChilePhysical geography editSee also Geography of Argentina and Geography of Chile nbsp Rio Negro Province ArgentinaArgentine Patagonia is for the most part a region of steppe like plains rising in a succession of 13 abrupt terraces about 100 m 330 ft at a time and covered with an enormous bed of shingle almost bare of vegetation 16 17 In the hollows of the plains are ponds or lakes of fresh and brackish water Towards Chilean territory the shingle gives way to porphyry granite and basalt lavas and animal life becomes more abundant 16 Vegetation is more luxuriant consisting principally of southern beech and conifers The high rainfall against the western Andes Wet Andes and the low sea surface temperatures offshore give rise to cold and humid air masses contributing to the ice fields and glaciers the largest ice fields in the Southern Hemisphere outside of Antarctica 17 Among the depressions by which the plateau is intersected transversely the principal ones are the Gualichu south of the Rio Negro the Maquinchao and Valcheta through which previously flowed the waters of Nahuel Huapi Lake which now feed the Limay River the Senguerr spelled Senguer on most Argentine maps and within the corresponding region and the Deseado River Besides these transverse depressions some of them marking lines of ancient interoceanic communication others were occupied by either more or less extensive lakes such as the Yagagtoo Musters and Colhue Huapi and others situated to the south of Puerto Deseado in the center of the country 16 Across much of Patagonia east of the Andes volcanic eruptions have created formation of basaltic lava plateaus during the Cenozoic 18 The plateaus are of different ages with the older of Neogene and Paleogene age being located at higher elevations than Pleistocene and Holocene lava plateaus and outcrops 18 Erosion which is caused principally by the sudden melting and retreat of ice aided by tectonic changes has scooped out a deep longitudinal depression best in evidence where in contact with folded Cretaceous rocks which are lifted up by the Cenozoic granite It generally separates the plateau from the first lofty hills whose ridges are generally called the pre Cordillera To the west of these a similar longitudinal depression extends all along the foot of the snowy Andean Cordillera This latter depression contains the richest most fertile land of Patagonia 16 Lake basins along the Cordillera were also gradually excavated by ice streams including Lake Argentino and Lake Fagnano as well as coastal bays such as Bahia Inutil 17 The establishment of dams near the Andes in Argentina in the 20th century has led to a sediment shortage along the Atlantic coast of Patagonia 19 Geology edit See also Tectonic evolution of Patagonia nbsp Ainsworth Bay and Marinelli Glacier ChileThe geological limit of Patagonia has been proposed to be Huincul Fault which forms a major discontinuity The fault truncates various structures including the Pampean orogen found further north The ages of base rocks change abruptly across the fault 20 Discrepancies have been mentioned among geologists on the origin of the Patagonian landmass Victor Ramos has proposed that the Patagonian landmass originated as an allochthonous terrane that separated from Antarctica and docked in South America 250 to 270 Mya in the Permian period 21 A 2014 study by R J Pankhurst and coworkers rejects any idea of a far traveled Patagonia claiming it is likely of parautochtonous nearby origin 22 The Mesozoic and Cenozoic deposits have revealed a most interesting vertebrate fauna This together with the discovery of the perfect cranium of a turtle chelonian of the genus Niolamia which is almost identical to Ninjemys oweni of the Pleistocene age in Queensland forms an evident proof of the connection between the Australian and South American continents The Patagonian Niolamia belongs to the Sarmienti Formation 23 Fossils of the mid Cretaceous Argentinosaurus which may be the largest of all dinosaurs have been found in Patagonia and a model of the mid Jurassic Piatnitzkysaurus graces the concourse of the Trelew airport the skeleton is in the Trelew paleontological museum the museum s staff has also announced the discovery of a species of dinosaur even bigger than Argentinosaurus 24 Of more than paleontological interest 25 the middle Jurassic Los Molles Formation and the still richer late Jurassic Tithonian and early Cretaceous Berriasian Vaca Muerta formation above it in the Neuquen basin are reported to contain huge hydrocarbon reserves mostly gas in Los Molles both gas and oil in Vaca Muerta partly accessible through hydraulic fracturing 26 Other specimens of the interesting fauna of Patagonia belonging to the Middle Cenozoic are the gigantic wingless birds exceeding in size any hitherto known and the singular mammal Pyrotherium also of very large dimensions In the Cenozoic marine formation considerable numbers of cetaceans have been discovered During the Oligocene and early Miocene large swathes of Patagonia were subject to a marine transgression which might have temporarily linked the Pacific and Atlantic Oceans as inferred from the findings of marine invertebrate fossils of both Atlantic and Pacific affinity in La Cascada Formation 27 28 Connection would have occurred through narrow epicontinental seaways that formed channels in a dissected topography 27 29 The Antarctic Plate started to subduct beneath South America 14 million years ago in the Miocene forming the Chile Triple Junction At first the Antarctic Plate subducted only in the southernmost tip of Patagonia meaning that the Chile Triple Junction was located near the Strait of Magellan As the southern part of the Nazca Plate and the Chile Rise became consumed by subduction the more northerly regions of the Antarctic Plate began to subduct beneath Patagonia so that the Chile Triple Junction advanced to the north over time 30 The asthenospheric window associated to the triple junction disturbed previous patterns of mantle convection beneath Patagonia inducing an uplift of c 1 km that reversed the Miocene transgression 29 31 Political divisions editAt a state level Patagonia visually occupies an area within two countries approximately 10 in Chile and approximately 90 in Argentina 32 Both countries have organized their Patagonian territories into nonequivalent administrative subdivisions provinces and departments in Argentina as well as regions provinces and communes in Chile As Chile is a unitary state its first level administrative divisions the regions enjoy far less autonomy than analogous Argentine provinces Argentine provinces have elected governors and legislatures while Chilean regions had government appointed intendants prior to the adoption of elected governors from 2021 The Patagonian Provinces of Argentina are Neuquen Rio Negro Chubut Santa Cruz and Tierra del Fuego The southernmost part of Buenos Aires Province can also be considered part of Patagonia The two Chilean regions undisputedly located entirely within Patagonia are Aysen and Magallanes Palena Province a part of the Los Lagos Region is also located within Patagonia By some definitions Chiloe Archipelago the rest of the Los Lagos Region and part of the Los Rios Region are also part of Patagonia Climate editSee also Climate of Argentina Climatic regions of Argentina and Climate of Chile nbsp View of Punta Arenas Chile in winterPatagonia s climate is mostly cool and dry year round The east coast is warmer than the west especially in summer as a branch of the southern equatorial current reaches its shores whereas the west coast is washed by a cold current However winters are colder on the inland plateaus east of the slopes and further down the coast on the southeast end of the Patagonian region For example at Puerto Montt on the inlet behind Chiloe Island the mean annual temperature is 11 C 52 F and the average extremes are 25 5 and 1 5 C 77 9 and 29 3 F whereas at Bahia Blanca near the Atlantic coast and just outside the northern confines of Patagonia the annual temperature is 15 C 59 F and the range much greater as temperatures above 35 C and below 5 C are recorded every year At Punta Arenas in the extreme south the mean temperature is 6 C 43 F and the average extremes are 24 5 and 2 C 76 1 and 28 4 F The prevailing winds are westerly and the westward slope has a much heavier precipitation than the eastern in a rainshadow effect 33 17 the western islands close to Torres del Paine receive an annual precipitation of 4 000 to 7 000 mm whilst the eastern hills are less than 800 mm and the plains may be as low as 200 mm annual precipitation 17 Precipitation is highly seasonal in northwestern Patagonia For example Villa La Angostura in Argentina close to the border with Chile receives up to 434 mm of rain and snow in May 297 mm in June and 273 in July compared to 80 in February and 72 in March The total for the city is 2074 mm making it one of the rainiest in Argentina Further west some areas receive up to 4 000 mm and more especially on the Chilean side In the northeast the seasons for rain are reversed most rain falls from occasional summer thunderstorms but totals barely reach 500 mm in the northeast corner and rapidly decrease to less than 300 mm The Patagonian west coast which belongs exclusively to Chile has a cool oceanic climate with summer maximum temperatures ranging from 14 C in the south to 19 C in the north and nights between 5 and 11 C and very high precipitation from 2 000 to more than 7 000 mm in local microclimates Snow is uncommon at the coast in the north but happens more often in the south and frost is usually not very intense citation needed Immediately east from the coast are the Andes cut by deep fjords in the south and by deep lakes in the north and with varying temperatures according to the altitude The tree line ranges from close to 2 000 m on the northern side except for the Andes in northern Neuquen in Argentina where sunnier and dryer conditions allow trees to grow up to close to 3 000 m and diminishes southward to only 600 800 m in Tierra del Fuego Precipitation changes dramatically from one spot to the other and diminishes very quickly eastward An example of this is Laguna Frias in Argentina which receives 4 400 mm yearly The city of Bariloche about 40 km further east receives about 1 000 mm and the airport another 15 km east receives less than 600 mm The easterly slopes of the Andes are home to several Argentine cities San Martin de los Andes Bariloche El Bolson Esquel and El Calafate Temperatures there are milder in the summer in the north between 20 and 24 C with cold nights between 4 and 9 C in the south summers are between 16 and 20 C at night temperatures are similar to the north and much colder in the winter with frequent snowfall although snow cover rarely lasts very long Daytime highs range from 3 to 9 C in the north and from 0 to 7 C in the south whereas nights range from 5 to 2 C everywhere Cold waves can bring much colder values a temperature of 25 C has been recorded in Bariloche and most places can often have temperatures between 12 and 15 C and highs staying around 0 C for a few days citation needed nbsp Santa Cruz ProvinceDirectly east of these areas the weather becomes much harsher precipitation drops to between 150 and 300 mm the mountains no longer protect the cities from the wind and temperatures become more extreme Maquinchao is a few hundred kilometers east of Bariloche at the same altitude on a plateau and summer daytime temperatures are usually about 5 C warmer rising up to 35 C sometimes but winter temperatures are much more extreme the record is 35 C and some nights not uncommonly reach 10 C colder than Bariloche The plateaus in Santa Cruz province and parts of Chubut usually have snow cover through the winter and often experience very cold temperatures In Chile the city of Balmaceda is known for being situated in this region which is otherwise almost exclusively in Argentina and for being the coldest place in Chile In 2017 temperatures even dropped down to 20 C in the region 34 The northern Atlantic coast has warm summers 28 to 32 C but with relatively cool nights at 15 C and mild winters with highs around 12 C and lows about 2 3 C Occasionally temperatures reach 10 or 40 C and rainfall is very scarce The weather only gets a bit colder further south in Chubut and the city of Comodoro Rivadavia has summer temperatures of 24 to 28 C nights of 12 to 16 C and winters with days around 10 C and nights around 3 C and less than 250 mm of rain However a drastic drop occurs as one moves south to Santa Cruz Rio Gallegos in the south of the province has summer temps of 17 to 21 C nights between 6 and 10 C and winter temperatures of 2 to 6 C with nights between 5 and 0 C despite being right on the coast Snowfall is common despite the dryness and temperatures are known to fall to under 18 C and to remain below freezing for several days in a row Rio Gallegos is also among the windiest places on Earth with winds reaching 100 km h occasionally citation needed Tierra del Fuego is extremely wet in the west relatively damp in the south and dry in the north and east Summers are cool 13 to 18 C in the north 12 to 16 C in the south with nights generally between 3 and 8 C cloudy in the south and very windy Winters are dark and cold but without the extreme temperatures in the south and west Ushuaia rarely reaches 10 C but hovers around 0 C for several months and snow can be heavy In the east and north winters are much more severe with cold snaps bringing temperatures down to 20 C all the way to the Rio Grande on the Atlantic coast Snow can fall even in the summer in most areas as well 35 36 Fauna edit nbsp Black browed albatross near UshuaiaThe guanaco Lama guanicoe South American cougar Puma concolor concolor the Patagonian fox Lycalopex griseus Patagonian hog nosed skunk Conepatus humboldtii and Magellanic tuco tuco Ctenomys magellanicus a subterranean rodent are the most characteristic mammals of the Patagonian plains 33 The Patagonian steppe is one of the last strongholds of the guanaco and Darwin s rheas Rhea pennata 37 which had been hunted for their skins by the Tehuelches on foot using boleadoras before the diffusion of firearms and horses 38 they were formerly the chief means of subsistence for the natives who hunted them on horseback with dogs and bolas Vizcachas Lagidum spp and the Patagonian mara 37 Dolichotis patagonum are also characteristic of the steppe and the pampas to the north Bird life is often abundant The crested caracara Caracara plancus is one of the characteristic objects of a Patagonian landscape the presence of austral parakeets Enicognathus ferrugineus as far south as the shores of the strait attracted the attention of the earlier navigators and green backed firecrowns Sephanoides sephaniodes a species of hummingbird may be seen flying amid the snowfall One of the largest birds in the world the Andean condor Vultur gryphus can be seen in Patagonia 39 Of the many kinds of waterfowl 37 the Chilean flamingo Phoenicopterus chilensis the upland goose Chloephaga picta and in the strait the remarkable steamer ducks are found 33 Signature marine fauna include the southern right whale the Magellanic penguin Spheniscus magellanicus the killer whale and elephant seals The Valdes Peninsula is a UNESCO World Heritage Site designated for its global significance as a site for the conservation of marine mammals 40 The Patagonian freshwater fish fauna is relatively restricted compared to other similar Southern Hemisphere regions The Argentine part is home to a total of 29 freshwater fish species 18 of which are native 41 The introduced are several species of trout common carp and various species that originated in more northerly parts of South America The natives are osmeriforms Aplochiton and Galaxias temperate perches Percichthys catfish Diplomystes Hatcheria and Trichomycterus Neotropical silversides Odontesthes and characiforms Astyanax Cheirodon Gymnocharacinus and Oligosarcus 41 Other Patagonian freshwater fauna include the highly unusual aeglid crustaceans 42 History editSee also History of Argentina History of Chile and Argentina Chile relations Pre Columbian Patagonia 10 000 BC AD 1520 edit nbsp Map of the indigenous peoples of Southern PatagoniaHuman habitation of the region dates back thousands of years 43 with some early archaeological findings in the area dated to at least the 13th millennium BC although later dates around the 10th millennium BC are more securely recognized Evidence exists of human activity at Monte Verde in Llanquihue Province Chile dated to around 12 500 BC 17 The glacial period ice fields and subsequent large meltwater streams would have made settlement difficult at that time The region seems to have been inhabited continuously since 10 000 BC by various cultures and alternating waves of migration the details of which are as yet poorly understood Several sites have been excavated notably caves such as Cueva del Milodon 44 in Ultima Esperanza in southern Patagonia and Tres Arroyos on Tierra del Fuego that support this date 17 Hearths stone scrapers and animal remains dated to 9400 9200 BC have been found east of the Andes 17 nbsp Cueva de las Manos site in Santa Cruz ArgentinaThe Cueva de las Manos is a famous site in Santa Cruz Argentina This cave at the foot of a cliff is covered in wall paintings particularly the negative images of hundreds of hands believed to date from around 8000 BC 17 Based on artifacts found in the region apparently hunting of guanaco and to a lesser extent rhea nandu were the primary food sources of tribes living on the eastern plains 17 Whether the megafauna of Patagonia including the ground sloth and horse were extinct in the area before the arrival of humans is unclear although this is now the more widely accepted account citation needed It is also not clear if domestic dogs were part of early human activity Bolas are commonly found and were used to catch guanaco and rhea 17 A maritime tradition existed along the Pacific coast 45 whose latest exponents were the Yaghan Yamana to the south of Tierra del Fuego the Kaweshqar between Taitao Peninsula and Tierra del Fuego and the Chono people in the Chonos Archipelago citation needed The Selk nam Haush and Tehuelche are generally thought to be culturally and linguistically related peoples physically distinct from the sea faring peoples 46 It is possible that Isla Grande de Tierra del Fuego was connected to the mainland in the Early Holocene c 9000 years BP much in the same way that Riesco Island was back then 47 A Selk nam tradition recorded by the Salesian missionary Giuseppe Maria Beauvoir relate that the Selk nam arrived in Tierra del Fuego by land and that the Selk nam were later unable to return north as the sea had flooded their crossing 48 Agriculture was practised in Pre Hispanic Argentina as far south as southern Mendoza Province 49 Agriculture was at times practised beyond this limit in nearby areas of Patagonia but populations reverted at times to non agricultural lifestyles 49 By the time of the Spanish arrival to the area 1550s there is no record of agriculture being practised in northern Patagonia 49 The extensive Patagonian grasslands and an associated abundance of guanaco game may have contributed for the indigenous populations to favour a hunter gathered lifestyle 49 The indigenous peoples of the region included the Tehuelches whose numbers and society were reduced to near extinction not long after the first contacts with Europeans Tehuelches included the Gununa kena to the north Mecharnuekenk in south central Patagonia and the Aonikenk or Southern Tehuelche in the far south north of the Magellan strait On Isla Grande de Tierra del Fuego the Selk nam Ona and Haush Manek enk lived in the north and southeast respectively In the archipelagos to the south of Tierra del Fuego were Yamana with the Kaweskar Alakaluf in the coastal areas and islands in western Tierra del Fuego and the southwest of the mainland 17 In the Patagonian archipelagoes north of Taitao Peninsula lived the Chonos These groups were encountered in the first periods of European contact with different lifestyles body decoration and language although it is unclear when this configuration emerged Towards the end of the 16th century Mapuche speaking agriculturalists penetrated the western Andes and from there across into the eastern plains and down to the far south Through confrontation and technological ability they came to dominate the other peoples of the region in a short period of time and are the principal indigenous community today 17 Early European exploration 1520 1669 edit nbsp Nao Victoria the replica of the first ship to pass through the Strait of MagellanNavigators such as Goncalo Coelho and Amerigo Vespucci possibly had reached the area his own account of 1502 has it that they reached the latitude 52 S but Vespucci s failure to accurately describe the main geographical features of the region such as the Rio de la Plata casts doubts on whether they really did so The first or more detailed description of part of the coastline of Patagonia is possibly mentioned in a Portuguese voyage in 1511 1512 traditionally attributed to captain Diogo Ribeiro who after his death was replaced by Estevao de Frois and was guided by the pilot and cosmographer Joao de Lisboa The explorers after reaching Rio de la Plata which they would explore on the return voyage contacting the Charrua and other peoples eventually reached San Matias Gulf at 42 S The expedition reported that after going south of the 40th parallel they found a land or a point extending into the sea and further south a gulf The expedition is said to have rounded the gulf for nearly 300 km 186 mi and sighted the continent on the southern side of the gulf 50 51 The Atlantic coast of Patagonia was first fully explored in 1520 by the Spanish expedition led by Ferdinand Magellan who on his passage along the coast named many of its more striking features San Matias Gulf Cape of 11 000 Virgins now simply Cape Virgenes and others 33 Magellan s fleet spent a difficult winter at what he named Puerto San Julian before resuming its voyage further south on 21 August 1520 During this time it encountered the local inhabitants likely to be Tehuelche people described by his reporter Antonio Pigafetta as giants called Patagons 52 The territory became the Spanish colony of the Governorate of New Leon granted in 1529 to Governor Simon de Alcazaba y Sotomayor es part of the Governorates of the Spanish Empire of the Americas The territory was redefined in 1534 and consisted of the southernmost part of the South American continent and the islands towards Antarctica Rodrigo de Isla sent inland in 1535 from San Matias by Simon de Alcazaba y Sotomayor on whom western Patagonia had been conferred by Charles I of Spain is presumed to have been the first European to have traversed the great Patagonian plain If the men under his charge had not mutinied he might have crossed the Andes to reach the Pacific coast Pedro de Mendoza on whom the country was next bestowed founded Buenos Aires but did not venture south Alonso de Camargo es 1539 Juan Ladrilleros 1557 and Hurtado de Mendoza 1558 helped to make known the Pacific coasts and while Sir Francis Drake s voyage in 1577 down the Atlantic coast through the Strait of Magellan and northward along the Pacific coast was memorable 33 yet the descriptions of the geography of Patagonia owe much more to the Spanish explorer Pedro Sarmiento de Gamboa 1579 1580 who devoting himself especially to the south west region made careful and accurate surveys The settlements that he founded at Nombre de Jesus and San Felipe was neglected by the Spanish government the latter being abandoned before Thomas Cavendish visited it in 1587 during his circumnavigation and so desolate that he called it Port Famine 33 After the discovery of the route around Cape Horn the Spanish Crown lost interest in southern Patagonia until the 18th century when the coastal settlements Carmen de Patagones San Jose Puerto Deseado and Nueva Colonia Floridablanca were established although it maintained its claim of a de jure sovereignty over the area In 1669 the district around Puerto Deseado was explored by John Davis and was claimed in 1670 by Sir John Narborough for King Charles II of England but the English made no attempt to establish settlements or explore the interior Patagonian giants early European perceptions edit Main article Patagon The first European explorers of Patagonia observed that the indigenous people in the region were taller than the average Europeans of the time prompting some of them to believe that Patagonians were giants According to Antonio Pigafetta 7 one of the Magellan expedition s few survivors and its published chronicler Magellan bestowed the name Patagao or Patagon on the inhabitants they encountered there and the name Patagonia for the region Although Pigafetta s account does not describe how this name came about subsequent popular interpretations gave credence to a derivation meaning land of the big feet However this etymology is questionable The term is most likely derived from an actual character name Patagon a savage creature confronted by Primaleon of Greece the hero in the homonymous Spanish chivalry novel or knight errantry tale by Francisco Vazquez 53 This book published in 1512 was the sequel of the romance Palmerin de Oliva it was much in vogue at the time and a favorite reading of Magellan Magellan s perception of the natives dressed in skins and eating raw meat clearly recalled the uncivilized Patagon in Vazquez s book Novelist and travel writer Bruce Chatwin suggests etymological roots of both Patagon and Patagonia in his book In Patagonia 54 noting the similarity between Patagon and the Greek word patagos citation needed which means a roaring or gnashing of teeth in his chronicle Pigafetta describes the Patagonians as roaring like bulls nbsp An 1840s illustration of indigenous Patagonians from near the Straits of Magellan from Voyage au pole sud et dans l Oceanie by French explorer Jules Dumont d UrvilleThe main interest in the region sparked by Pigafetta s account came from his reports of their meeting with the local inhabitants whom they claimed to measure some 9 to 12 feet in height so tall that we reached only to his waist hence the later idea that Patagonia meant big feet This supposed race of Patagonian giants or Patagones entered into the common European perception of this then little known and distant area to be further fueled by subsequent reports of other expeditions and famous travelers such as Sir Francis Drake which seemed to confirm these accounts citation needed Early charts of the New World sometimes added the legend regio gigantum region of the giants to the Patagonian area By 1611 the Patagonian god Setebos Settaboth in Pigafetta was familiar to the hearers of The Tempest 33 The concept and general belief persisted for a further 250 years and was to be sensationally reignited in 1767 when an official but anonymous account was published of Commodore John Byron s recent voyage of global circumnavigation in HMS Dolphin Byron and crew had spent some time along the coast and the publication Voyage Round the World in His Majesty s Ship the Dolphin seemed to give proof positive of their existence the publication became an overnight bestseller thousands of extra copies were to be sold to a willing public and other prior accounts of the region were hastily republished even those in which giant like folk were not mentioned at all However the Patagonian giant frenzy died down substantially only a few years later when some more sober and analytical accounts were published In 1773 John Hawkesworth published on behalf of the Admiralty a compendium of noted English southern hemisphere explorers journals including that of James Cook and John Byron In this publication drawn from their official logs the people Byron s expedition had encountered clearly were no taller than 6 foot 6 inch 1 98 m very tall but by no means giants Interest soon subsided although awareness of and belief in the concept persisted in some quarters even into the 20th century 55 Spanish outposts edit The Spanish failure at colonizing the Strait of Magellan made Chiloe Archipelago assume the role of protecting the area of western Patagonia from foreign intrusions 56 Valdivia reestablished in 1645 and Chiloe acted as sentries being hubs where the Spanish collected information and rumors from all over Patagonia 57 As a result of the corsair and pirate menace Spanish authorities ordered the depopulation of the Guaitecas Archipelago to deprive enemies of any eventual support from native populations 11 This then led to the transfer of the majority of the indigenous Chono population to the Chiloe Archipelago in the north while some Chonos moved south of Taitao Peninsula effectively depopulating the territory in the 18th century 11 The publication of Thomas Falkner s book A Description of Patagonia and the Adjacent Parts of South America in England fuelled speculations in Spain about renewed British interest in Patagonia In response an order from the King of Spain was issued to settle the eastern coast of Patagonia 58 This led to the brief existence of colonies at the Gulf of San Jorge 1778 1779 and San Julian 1780 1783 and the more longlasting colony of Carmen de Patagones 58 Scientific exploration 1764 1842 edit In the second half of the 18th century European knowledge of Patagonia was further augmented by the voyages of the previously mentioned John Byron 1764 1765 Samuel Wallis 1766 in the same HMS Dolphin which Byron had earlier sailed in and Louis Antoine de Bougainville 1766 Thomas Falkner a Jesuit who resided near forty years in those parts published his Description of Patagonia Hereford 1774 Francisco Viedma founded El Carmen nowadays Carmen de Patagones and Antonio settled the area of San Julian Bay where he founded the colony of Floridablanca and advanced inland to the Andes 1782 Basilio Villarino ascended the Rio Negro 1782 33 nbsp Tehuelche warriors in PatagoniaTwo hydrographic surveys of the coasts were of first rate importance the first expedition 1826 1830 included HMS Adventure and HMS Beagle under Phillip Parker King and the second 1832 1836 was the voyage of the Beagle under Robert FitzRoy The latter expedition is particularly noted for the participation of Charles Darwin who spent considerable time investigating various areas of Patagonia onshore including long rides with gauchos in Rio Negro and who joined FitzRoy in a 200 mi 320 km expedition taking ships boats up the course of the Santa Cruz River 33 Spanish American independence wars edit During the independence wars rumours about the imminent arrival of Spanish troops to Patagonia either from Peru or Chiloe were common among indigenous peoples of the Pampas and northern Patagonia 59 In 1820 Chilean patriot leader Jose Miguel Carrera allied with the indigenous Ranquel people of the Pampas in order to fight the rival patriots in Buenos Aires 59 Jose Miguel Carrera ultimately planned to cross the Andes into Chile and oust his rivals in Chile The last royalist armed group in what is today Argentina and Chile the Pincheira brothers moved from the vicinities of Chillan across the Andes into northern Patagonia as patriots consolidated control of Chile The Pincheira brothers was an outlaw gang made of Europeans Spanish American Spanish Mestizos and local indigenous peoples 60 This group was able to move to Patagonia thanks to its alliance with two indigenous tribes the Ranqueles and the Boroanos 60 59 In the interior of Patagonia far from the de facto territory of Chile and the United Provinces the Pincheira brothers established permanent encampment with thousands of settlers 60 From their bases the Pincheiras led numerous raids into the countryside of the newly established republics 59 Chilean and Argentine colonization 1843 1902 edit nbsp In blue and green are the boundaries claimed by Argentinian 61 and Chilean 62 63 64 65 historians respectably as uti possidetis iuris in Patagonia In the early 19th century the araucanization of the natives of northern Patagonia intensified and many Mapuches migrated to Patagonia to live as nomads that raised cattle or pillaged the Argentine countryside The cattle stolen in the incursions malones were later taken to Chile through the mountain passes and traded for goods especially alcoholic beverages The main trail for this trade was called Camino de los chilenos and runs a length around 1000 km from the Buenos Aires Province to the mountain passes of Neuquen Province The lonco Calfucura crossed the Andes from Chile to the pampas around 1830 after a call from the governor of Buenos Aires Juan Manuel de Rosas to fight the Boroano people In 1859 he attacked Bahia Blanca in Argentina with 3 000 warriors As in the case of Calfucura many other bands of Mapuches got involved in the internal conflicts of Argentina until Conquest of the Desert To counter the cattle raids a trench called the Zanja de Alsina was built by Argentina in the pampas in the 1870s nbsp Map of the advance of the Argentine frontier until the establishment of zanja de AlsinaIn the mid 19th century the newly independent nations of Argentina and Chile began an aggressive phase of expansion into the south increasing confrontation with the Indigenous peoples of the region In 1860 French adventurer Orelie Antoine de Tounens proclaimed himself king of the Kingdom of Araucania and Patagonia of the Mapuche Following the last instructions of Bernardo O Higgins the Chilean president Manuel Bulnes sent an expedition to the Strait of Magellan and founded Fuerte Bulnes in 1843 Five years later the Chilean government moved the main settlement to the current location of Punta Arenas the oldest permanent settlement in Southern Patagonia The creation of Punta Arenas was instrumental in making Chile s claim of the Strait of Magellan permanent In the 1860s sheep from the Falkland Islands were introduced to the lands around the Straits of Magellan and throughout the 19th century sheepfarming grew to be the most important economic sector in southern Patagonia citation needed George Chaworth Musters in 1869 wandered in company with a band of Tehuelches through the whole length of the country from the strait to the Manzaneros in the northwest and collected a great deal of information about the people and their mode of life 33 66 Conquest of the Desert and the 1881 treaty edit Main articles Conquest of the Desert and Boundary Treaty of 1881 between Chile and Argentina nbsp Territorial losses of the Republic of Chile de jure by law according to Chilean historiography 62 nbsp Under General Roca the Conquest of the Desert extended Argentine power into PatagoniaArgentine authorities worried that the strong connections araucanized tribes had with Chile would allegedly give Chile certain influence over the pampas 67 Argentine authorities feared that in an eventual war with Chile over Patagonia the natives would side with the Chileans and the war would be brought to the vicinity of Buenos Aires 67 The decision to plan and execute the Conquest of the Desert was probably catalyzed by the 1872 attack of Cufulcura and his 6 000 followers on the cities of General Alvear Veinticinco de Mayo and Nueve de Julio where 300 criollos were killed and 200 000 heads of cattle taken In the 1870s the Conquest of the Desert was a controversial campaign by the Argentine government executed mainly by General Julio Argentino Roca to subdue or some claim to exterminate the native peoples of the south In 1885 a mining expeditionary party under the Romanian adventurer Julius Popper landed in southern Patagonia in search of gold which they found after traveling southwards towards the lands of Tierra del Fuego This led to the further opening up of the area to prospectors European missionaries and settlers arrived throughout the 19th and 20th centuries notably the Welsh settlement of the Chubut Valley Numerous Croatians also settled in Patagonia 68 During the first years of the 20th century the border between the two nations in Patagonia was established by the mediation of the British crown Numerous modifications have been made since then the last conflict having been resolved in 1994 by an arbitration tribunal constituted in Rio de Janeiro It granted Argentina sovereignty over the Southern Patagonia Icefield Cerro Fitz Roy and Laguna del Desierto 69 70 circular reference Until 1902 a large proportion of Patagonia s population were natives of Chiloe Archipelago Chilotes who worked as peons in large livestock farming estancias Because they were manual laborers their social status was below that of the gauchos and the Argentine Chilean and European landowners and administrators Before and after 1902 when the boundaries were drawn Argentina expelled many Chilotes from their territory as they feared that having a large Chilean population in Argentina could pose a risk to their future control These workers founded the first inland Chilean settlement in what is now the Aysen Region 71 72 Balmaceda Lacking good grasslands on the forest covered Chilean side the immigrants burned down the forest setting fires that could last more than two years 72 Economy edit nbsp Tierra del Fuego sheep ranch 1942 The region s primary activity then it has been eclipsed by the decline in the global wool market as much as by petroleum and gas extraction The area s principal economic activities have been mining whaling livestock notably sheep throughout agriculture wheat and fruit production near the Andes towards the north and oil after its discovery near Comodoro Rivadavia in 1907 73 Energy production is also a crucial part of the local economy Railways were planned to cover continental Argentine Patagonia to serve the oil mining agricultural and energy industries and a line was built connecting San Carlos de Bariloche to Buenos Aires Portions of other lines were built to the south but the only lines still in use are La Trochita in Esquel the Train of the End of the World in Ushuaia both heritage lines 74 and a short run Tren Historico de Bariloche to Perito Moreno In the western forest covered Patagonian Andes and archipelagoes wood logging has historically been an important part of the economy it impelled the colonization of the areas of the Nahuel Huapi and Lacar lakes in Argentina and Guaitecas Archipelago in Chile Livestock edit See also Patagonian sheep farming boom nbsp Gauchos mustering sheep in PatagoniaSheep farming introduced in the late 19th century has been a principal economic activity After reaching its heights during the First World War the decline in world wool prices affected sheep farming in Argentina Nowadays about half of Argentina s 15 million sheep are in Patagonia a percentage that is growing as sheep farming disappears in the pampas to the north Chubut mainly Merino is the top wool producer with Santa Cruz Corriedale and some Merino second Sheep farming revived in 2002 with the devaluation of the peso and firmer global demand for wool led by China and the EU Still little investment occurs in new abattoirs mainly in Comodoro Rivadavia Trelew and Rio Gallegos and often phytosanitary restrictions reduce the export of sheep meat Extensive valleys in the Cordilleran Range have provided sufficient grazing lands and the low humidity and weather of the southern region make raising Merino and Corriedale sheep common Livestock also includes small numbers of cattle and in lesser numbers pigs and horses Sheep farming provides a small but important number of jobs for rural areas with little other employment Tourism edit nbsp Whale watching off the Valdes PeninsulaIn the second half of the 20th century tourism became an ever more important part of Patagonia s economy Originally a remote backpacking destination the region has attracted increasing numbers of upmarket visitors cruise passengers rounding Cape Horn or visiting Antarctica and adventure and activity holiday makers Principal tourist attractions include the Perito Moreno glacier the Valdes Peninsula the Argentine Lake District and Ushuaia and Tierra del Fuego the city is also a jumping off place for travel to Antarctica bringing in still more visitors Tourism has created new markets locally and for export for traditional crafts such as Mapuche handicrafts guanaco textiles and confectionery and preserves 73 A spin off from increased tourism has been the buying of often enormous tracts of land by foreigners often as a prestige purchase rather than for agriculture Buyers have included Sylvester Stallone Ted Turner and Christopher Lambert and most notably Luciano Benetton Patagonia s largest landowner 73 His Compania de Tierras Sud has brought new techniques to the ailing sheep rearing industry and sponsored museums and community facilities but has been controversial particularly for its treatment of local Mapuche communities 75 Energy edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed September 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp La Trochita on its Chubut Province route Formerly the sole rapid transport means in the province La Trochita is now a tourist attraction Due to its sparse rainfall in agricultural areas Argentine Patagonia already has numerous dams for irrigation some of which are also used for hydropower The Limay River is used to generate hydroelectricity at five dams built on its course Alicura Piedra del Aguila Pichi Picun Leufu El Chocon and Arroyito Together with the Cerros Colorados Complex on the Neuquen River they contribute more than one quarter of the total hydroelectric generation in the country Patagonia has always been Argentina s main area and Chile s only area of conventional oil and gas production Oil and gas have played an important role in the rise of Neuquen Cipolleti as Patagonia s most populous urban area and in the growth of Comodoro Rivadavia Punta Arenas and Rio Grande as well The development of the Neuquen basin s enormous unconventional oil and gas reserves through hydraulic fracturing has just begun but the YPF Chevron Loma Campana field in the Vaca Muerta formation is already the world s largest producing shale oil field outside North America according to former YPF CEO Miguel Gallucio Patagonia s notorious winds have already made the area Argentina s main source of wind power and plans have been made for major increases in wind power generation Coal is mined in the Rio Turbio area and used for electricity generation Cuisine editArgentine Patagonian cuisine is largely the same as the cuisine of Buenos Aires grilled meats and pasta with extensive 76 use of local ingredients and less use of those products that have to be imported into the region Lamb is considered the traditional Patagonian meat grilled for several hours over an open fire Some guide books have reported that game meats especially guanaco and introduced deer and boar are popular in restaurant cuisine However since guanaco is a protected animal in both Chile and Argentina it is unlikely to appear commonly as restaurant fare Trout and centolla king crab are also common though overfishing of centolla has made it increasingly scarce In the area around Bariloche a noted Alpine cuisine tradition remains with chocolate bars and even fondue restaurants and tea rooms are a feature of the Welsh communities in Gaiman and Trevelin as well as in the mountains 73 Since the mid 1990s some success with winemaking has occurred in Argentine Patagonia especially in Neuquen Foreign land buyers issue editForeign investors including Italian multinational Benetton Group media magnate Ted Turner British billionaire Joe Lewis 77 and the conservationist Douglas Tompkins own major land areas This situation has caused several conflicts with local inhabitants and the governments of Chile and Argentina for example the opposition by Douglas Tompkins to the planned route for Carretera Austral in Pumalin Park A scandal is also brewing about two properties owned by Ted Turner the estancia La Primavera located inside Nahuel Huapi National Park and the estancia Collon Cura 77 Benetton has faced criticism from Mapuche organizations including Mapuche International Link over its purchase of traditional Mapuche lands in Patagonia The Curinanco Nahuelquir family was evicted from their land in 2002 following Benetton s claim to it but the land was restored in 2007 78 79 In literature editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Patagonia news newspapers books scholar JSTOR November 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message In Jules Verne s 1867 1868 novel Les Enfants du capitaine Grant The Children of Captain Grant alternatively In Search of the Castaways the search for Captain Grant gets underway when the Duncan a vessel in the ownership of Lord Glenarvan is taken on a journey to the western shore of South America s Patagonian region where the crew is split up and Lord Glenarvan proceeds to lead a party eastwards across Patagonia to eventually reunite with the Duncan which had doubled the Cape in the meanwhile The future history depicted in Olaf Stapledon s 1930 novel Last and First Men includes a far future time in which Patagonia becomes the center of a new world civilization while Europe and North America are reduced to the status of backward poverty stricken areas In William Goldman s 1987 movie The Princess Bride Westley the current inheritor of the moniker the Dread Pirate Roberts states that the real original Dread Pirate Roberts is retired and living like a king in Patagonia In David Grann s 2023 non fiction book The Wager A Tale of Shipwreck Mutiny and Murder the surviving crew of HMS Wager are shipwrecked on the Chilean coast of Patagonia estimating their position to be at around 47 degrees south and 81 40 degrees west 80 See also editApostolic Prefecture of Southern Patagonia Apostolic Vicariate of Northern Patagonia Beagle conflict Domuyo Francisco Moreno Museum of Patagonia Lago Puelo National Park Lanin National Park Lanin Volcano List of deserts by area Los Alerces National Park Los Glaciares National Park Mount Hudson Nahuel Huapi National Park Patagonian Expedition Race Patagonian Ice Sheet Southern Cone Y WladfaReferences edit The Late Cenozoic of Patagonia and Tierra del Fuego Volumen 11 de Developments in quaternary science pag 13 Autor Jorge Rabassa Editor Jorge Rabassa Editor Elsevier 2008 ISBN 0 444 52954 3 9780444529541 Manuel Enrique Schilling Richard WalterCarlson AndresTassara Rommulo Vieira Conceicao Gustavo Walter Bertotto Manuel Vasquez Daniel Munoz Tiago Jalowitzki Fernanda Gervasoni Diego Morata 2017 The origin of Patagonia revealed by Re Os systematics of mantle xenoliths Precambrian Research volumen 294 15 32 Zunino H Matossian B Hidalgo R 2012 Poblamiento y desarrollo de enclaves turisticos en la Norpatagonia chileno argentina Migracion y frontera en un espacio binacional Population and development of tourist enclaves in the Chilean Argentine Norpatagonia Migration and the border in a binational space Revista de Geografia Norte Grande 53 137 158 Zunino M Espinoza L Vallejos Romero A 2016 Los migrantes por estilo de vida como agentes de transformacion en la Norpatagonia chilena Revista de Estudios Sociales 55 2016 163 176 Ciudadania territorio y desarrollo endogeno resistencias y mediaciones de las politicas locales en las encrucijadas del neoliberalismo Pag 205 Autores Ruben Zarate Liliana Artesi Oscar Madoery Editor Editorial Biblos 2007 ISBN 950 786 616 7 9789507866166 Cayuqueo Pedro 2020 Historia secreta mapuche 2 Santiago de Chile Catalonia pp 34 37 ISBN 978 956 324 783 1 a b Antonio Pigafetta Relazione del primo viaggio intorno al mondo 1524 Il capitano generale nomino questi popoli Patagoni A Brief Declaration of the Vyage abowte the Worlde by Antonie Pygafetta Vincentine Rycharde Eden The Decades of the Newe Worlde or West India London William Powell 1555 The original word was likely in Magellan s native Portuguese patagao or the Spanish of his men patagon It was later interpreted later as bigfoot but the etymology refers to a literary character in a Spanish novel of the early 16th century Patagon said to be engendred by a beast in the woods being the strangest most misshapen and counterfeit creature in the world He hath good understanding is amorous of women and keepeth company with one of whom it is said he was engendred He hath the face of a Dogge great ears which hang down upon his shoulders his teeth sharp and big standing out of his mouth very much his feet are like a Harts and he runneth wondrous lightly Such as have seen him tell marvelous matters of him because he chaseth ordinarily among the mountains with two Lyons in a chain like a lease and a bow in his hand Anthony Munday The Famous and Renowned Historie of Primaleon of Greece 1619 cap XXXIII How Primaleon found the Grand Patagon Fondebrider Jorge 2003 Chapter 1 Ambitos y voces Versiones de la Patagonia in Spanish 1st ed Buenos Aires Argentina Emece Editores S A p 29 ISBN 978 950 04 2498 1 Robert Silverberg 2011 The Strange Case of the Patagonian Giants PDF Asimov s Science Fiction Archived from the original PDF on 6 August 2020 Retrieved 12 November 2016 To the voyagers of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries when the average height of an adult European male was just over five feet 1 55 meters the Patagonians surely must have looked very large as to any child all adults seem colossal Then too an element of understandable human exaggeration must have entered these accounts of men who had traveled so far and endured so much and the natural wish not to be outdone by one s predecessors helped to produce these repeated fantasies of Goliaths ten feet tall or even more Nueva Revista de Filologia Hispanica 59 1 pp 37 78 2011 ISSN 0185 0121 a b c Ibar Bruce Jorge 1960 Ensayo sobre los indios Chonos e interpretacion de sus toponimias Anales de la Universidad de Chile in Spanish 117 61 70 a b Latorre Guillermo 1998 Sustrato y superestrato multilingues en la toponimia del extremo sur de Chile Multilingual substratum and superstratum in the toponymy of the south of Chile Estudios Filologicos in Spanish 33 55 67 Alcaman Eugenio 1997 Los mapuche huilliche del Futahuillimapu septentrional Expansion colonial guerras internas y alianzas politicas 1750 1792 PDF Revista de Historia Indigena in Spanish 2 29 76 Archived from the original PDF on 28 December 2013 Retrieved 16 August 2020 Stefani Catalina Lidia 2020 Una mirada historiografica sobre la construccion de la toponimia departamental del Territorio Nacional del Chubut Revista TEFROS 18 2 139 151 Aseguran que en Bariloche viven 30 mil personas mas que las censadas ANGOSTURA DIGITAL DIARIO DE VILLA LA ANGOSTURA Y REGION DE LOS LAGOS PATAGONIA ARGENTINA Actualidad cuentos efemerides turismo nieve pesca montanismo cursos historia reportajes Archived from the original on 7 May 2015 Retrieved 25 October 2014 a b c d Chisholm 1911 p 899 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Patagonia Natural History Prehistory and Ethnography at the Uttermost End of the Earth C McEwan L A and A Prieto eds Princeton University Press with British Museum Press 1997 ISBN 0 691 05849 0 a b Mazzoni Elizabeth Rabassa Jorge 2010 Inventario y clasificacion de manifestaciones basalticas de Patagonia mediante imagenes satelitales y SIG Provincia de Santa Cruz Inventory and classification of basaltic occurrences of Patagonia based on satellite images and G I S province of Santa Cruz PDF Revista de la Asociacion Geologica Argentina in Spanish 66 4 608 618 Isla Federico Ignacio Isla Manuel Fermin 2022 Geological Changes in Coastal Areas of Patagonia Argentina and Chile In Helbling E Walter Narvarte Maite A Gonzalez Raul A Villafane Virginia E eds Global Change in Atlantic Coastal Patagonian Ecosystems Natural and Social Sciences of Patagonia Springer pp 73 89 doi 10 1007 978 3 030 86676 1 4 ISBN 978 3 030 86675 4 Ramos V A Riccardi A C Rolleri E O 2004 Limites naturales del norte de la Patagonia Revista de la Asociacion Geologica Argentina in Spanish 59 4 Jaramillo Jessica 6 April 2014 Entrevista al Dr Victor Alberto Ramos Premio Mexico Ciencia y Tecnologia 2013 in Spanish Incluso ahora continua la discusion sobre el origen de la Patagonia la cual lleva mas de veinte anos sin lograr un consenso entre la comunidad cientifica Lo que propone el grupo de investigacion en el que trabaja el geologo es que la Patagonia se origino en el continente Antartico para despues separarse y formar parte de Gondwana alrededor de 250 a 270 millones de anos Pankhurst R J Rapela C W Lopez de Luchi M G Rapalini A E Fanning C M Galindo C 2014 The Gondwana connections of northern Patagonia PDF Journal of the Geological Society London 171 3 313 328 Bibcode 2014JGSoc 171 313P doi 10 1144 jgs2013 081 S2CID 53687880 Chisholm 1911 p 900 Morgan James 17 May 2014 BBC News Biggest dinosaur ever discovered BBC News Retrieved 25 October 2014 Though not without it where the formations surface see Chacaicosaurus and Mollesaurus from the Los Molles and Caypullisaurus Cricosaurus Geosaurus Herbstosaurus and Wenupteryx from the Vaca Muerta U S Energy Information Administration Technically Recoverable Shale Oil and Shale Gas Resources An Assessment of 137 Shale Formations in 41 Countries Outside the United States June 2013 pp V 1 through V 13 According to the same study the Austral Argentine name or Magallanes Chilean name basin under the southern Patagonian mainland and Tierra del Fuego may also have massive hydrocarbon reserves in early Cretaceous shales see pp V 23 and VII 17 in particular On 21 May 2014 YPF also announced the first oil and gas discovery in the D 129 shale formation of the Golfo San Jorge area in Chubut and on 14 August 2014 the first shale oil discovery in yet another Cretaceous formation in the Neuquen basin the Valanginian Hauterivian Agrio formation see YPF confirmo la presencia de hidrocarburos no convencionales en Chubut Archived from the original on 26 May 2014 Retrieved 27 May 2014 and Galuccio inauguro el Espacio de la Energia de YPF en Tecnopolis Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 18 August 2014 a b Encinas Alfonso Perez Felipe Nielsen Sven Finger Kenneth L Valencia Victor Duhart Paul 2014 Geochronologic and paleontologic evidence for a Pacific Atlantic connection during the late Oligocene early Miocene in the Patagonian Andes 43 44 S Journal of South American Earth Sciences 55 1 18 Bibcode 2014JSAES 55 1E doi 10 1016 j jsames 2014 06 008 hdl 10533 130517 Nielsen S N 2005 Cenozoic Strombidae Aporrhaidae and Struthiolariidae Gastropoda Stromboidea from Chile their significance to biogeography of faunas and climate of the south east Pacific Journal of Paleontology 79 6 1120 1130 doi 10 1666 0022 3360 2005 079 1120 csaasg 2 0 co 2 S2CID 130207579 a b Guillame Benjamin Martinod Joseph Husson Laurent Roddaz Martin Riquelme Rodrigo 2009 Neogene uplift of central eastern Patagonia Dynamic response to active spreading ridge subduction PDF Tectonics 28 2 TC2009 Bibcode 2009Tecto 28 2009G doi 10 1029 2008tc002324 Cande S C Leslie R B 1986 Late Cenozoic Tectonics of the Southern Chile Trench Journal of Geophysical Research Solid Earth 91 B1 471 496 Bibcode 1986JGR 91 471C doi 10 1029 jb091ib01p00471 Guillaume Benjamin Gautheron Cecile Simon Labric Thibaud Martinod Joseph Roddaz Martin Douville Eric 2013 Dynamic topography control on Patagonian relief evolution as inferred from low temperature thermochronology Earth and Planetary Science Letters 364 157 167 Bibcode 2013E amp PSL 364 157G doi 10 1016 j epsl 2012 12 036 Patagonia Map Main regions and areas of Patagonia a b c d e f g h i j Chisholm 1911 p 901 Chile in summer mood 18 5 C annual average and over 2450 hours of sunshine Worlddata info Retrieved 26 November 2023 Pitman Zoe May 2023 Evaluating Snow and Ice Cover in Tierra del Fuego Argentina Evaluating Snow and Ice Cover in Tierra del Fuego Argentina ScholarWorks UARK p 8 9 Retrieved 25 November 2023 Geography of Tierra del Fuego MUSEO MARITIMO DE USHUAIA in Spanish Retrieved 26 November 2023 a b c WCS Patagonia and Southern Andean Steppe Argentina Saving Wild Places Wildlife Conservation Society Retrieved 19 June 2015 Rhys David Hall 1976 A geographic study of the Welsh colonization in Chubut Patagonia Ann Arbor Michigan Xerox University Microfilms pp 84 88 WCS Andean condor Saving wildlife World Conservation Society Retrieved 19 June 2015 UNESCO Peninsula Valdes UNESCO World Heritage Center UNESCO Retrieved 19 June 2015 a b Baigun C Ferriz R A 2003 Distribution patterns of freshwater fishes in Patagonia Argentina Organisms Diversity amp Evolution 3 2 151 159 doi 10 1078 1439 6092 00075 Christopher C Tudge 2003 Endemic and enigmatic the reproductive biology of Aegla Crustacea Anomura Aeglidae with observations on sperm structure Memoirs of Museum Victoria 60 1 63 70 doi 10 24199 j mmv 2003 60 9 SCHLOSSBERG TATIANA 17 June 2016 12 000 Years Ago Humans and Climate Change Made a Deadly Team NYT NYC Retrieved 19 June 2016 C Michael Hogan 2008 Cueva del Milodon The Megalithic Portal ed A Burnham 1 Mostny 1983 p 34 Chapman Anne Hester Thomas R 1973 New data on the archaeology of the Haush Tierra del Fuego Journal de la Societe des Americaniste 62 185 208 doi 10 3406 jsa 1973 2088 Mostny 1983 p 21 Selk nam La enciclopedia de ciencias y tecnologias en Argentina in Spanish 1 December 2013 Retrieved 23 December 2020 a b c d Neme Gustavo Gil Adolfo Salgan Laura Giardina Miguel Otaola Clara Pompei Maria de la Paz Peralta Eva Sugranes Nuria Franchetti Fernando Ricardo Abonna Cinthia 2022 Una Aproximacion Biogeografica a los Limites de la Agricultura en el Norte de Patagonia Argentina A Biogeographic Approach to Farming Limits in Northern Patagonia Argentina PDF Chungara in Spanish 54 3 397 418 Oskar Hermann Khristian Spate The Spanish Lake Canberra ANU E Press 2004 p 37 2 Newen Zeytung auss Presillg Landt in ancient German and Portuguese Newen Zeytung auss Presillg Landt Laurence Bergreen 14 October 2003 Over the Edge of the World Harper Perennial 2003 p 163 ISBN 978 0 06 621173 2 Ulijaszek Stanley J Johnston Francis E Preece M A eds 1998 Patagonian Giants Myths and Possibilities The Cambridge Encyclopedia of Human Growth and Development Cambridge University Press p 380 Chatwin Bruce In Patagonia 1977 ch 49 Carolyne Ryan European Travel Writings and the Patagonian giants Lawrence University Archived from the original on 5 August 2012 Retrieved 24 October 2013 Urbina C M Ximena 2013 Expediciones a las costas de la Patagonia Occidental en el periodo colonial Magallania in Spanish 41 2 51 84 doi 10 4067 S0718 22442013000200002 Urbina C Maria Ximena 2017 La expedicion de John Narborough a Chile 1670 Defensa de Valdivia rumeros de indios informaciones de los prisioneros y la creencia en la Ciudad de los Cesares John Narborough expedition to Chile 1670 Defense of Valdivia indian rumors information on prisoners and the belief in the City of the Cesares Magallania 45 2 11 36 doi 10 4067 S0718 22442017000200011 a b Williams 1975 p 17 18 a b c d Ratto Silvia 2008 Revolucion en las pampas Diplomacia y malones entre indigenas de pampa y patagonia In Fradkin Raul O ed Y el Pueblo donde esta Contribuciones para una historia popular de la revolucion de independencia en el Rio de la Plata in Spanish Buenos Aires Prometeo Libros pp 241 246 ISBN 978 987 574 248 2 a b c Manara Carla G 2010 Movilizacion en las fronteras Los Pincheira y el ultima intento de reconquista hispana en el sur Americano 1818 1832 PDF Revista Sociedad de Paisajes Aridos y Semiaridos in Spanish Universidad Nacional de Rio Cuarto II II 39 60 Dalmacio Velez Sarsfield 1853 Discusion de los titulos del Gobierno de Chile a las tierras del Estrecho de Magallanes Imprenta Argentina a b Eyzaguirre Jaime 1967 Breve historia de las fronteras de Chile in Spanish Editorial Universitaria Lagos Carmona Guillermo 1985 Los Titulos Historicos Historia de Las Fronteras de Chile Andres Bello Amunategui Miguel Luis 1985 Titulos de la Republica de Chile a la soberania i dominio de la Estremidad Morla Vicuna Carlos 1903 Estudio historico sobre el descubrimiento y conquista de la Patagonia y de la Tierra del Fuego Leipzig F A Brockhaus Dickenson John Musters George Chaworth Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 19679 Subscription or UK public library membership required a b Perry Richard O 1980 Argentina and Chile The Struggle For Patagonia 1843 1881 The Americas 36 3 347 363 doi 10 2307 981291 JSTOR 981291 S2CID 147607097 Bilic Danira 5 May 2008 Vucetic s time and the Croatian community in Argentina Croatian Heritage Foundation Archived from the original on 21 May 2011 Rosa Carlos Leonardo de la 1 January 1998 Acuerdo sobre los hielos continentales razones para su aprobacion Ediciones Juridicas Cuyo ISBN 9789509099678 es Disputa de la laguna del Desierto Coihaique Ciudades y Pueblos del sur de Chile Turistel cl Retrieved 20 August 2012 a b Luis Otero La Huella del Fuego Historia de los bosques y cambios en el paisaje del sur de Chile Valdivia Editorial Pehuen a b c d Time Out Patagonia Cathy Runciman ed Penguin Books 2002 ISBN 0 14 101240 4 History of the Old Patagonian Express Archived 27 August 2005 at the Wayback Machine La Trochita accessed 2006 08 11 The Invisible Colors of Benetton Mapuche International Link accessed 2006 08 11 Travel to Patagonia Must Try Argentina Foods Say Hueque 4 May 2016 Retrieved 21 December 2021 a b Rivers of bloodfrom Patagonia argentina com Recovered Mapuche territory in Patagonia Benetton vs Mapuche MAPU Association Archived from the original on 8 September 2012 Retrieved 7 April 2008 Exploring Patagonia in Argentina and Chile Grann David The Wager A Tale of Shipwreck Mutiny and Murder Doubleday p 270 ISBN 978 0385534260 Attribution nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Patagonia Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 20 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 899 901 Mostny Grete 1983 1981 Prehistoria de Chile in Spanish 6th ed Santiago de Chile Editorial Universitaria Williams Glyn 1975 The Desert and the Dream University of Wales Press ISBN 0708305792 Further reading editThe Last Cowboys at the End of the World The Story of the Gauchos of Patagonia Nick Reding 2002 ISBN 0 609 81004 9 The Old Patagonian Express Paul Theroux 1979 In Patagonia Bruce Chatwin 1977 and 1988 ISBN 0 14 243719 0 Patagonia Express Luis Sepulveda 2004 ISBN 978 8483835784 Patagonia A Cultural History Chris Moss 2008 ISBN 978 1 904955 38 2 Patagonia A Forgotten Land From Magellan to Peron C A Brebbia 2006 ISBN 978 1 84564 061 3 The Wild Shores of Patagonia The Valdes Peninsula amp Punta Tombo Jasmine Rossi 2000 ISBN 0 8109 4352 2 Luciana Vismara Maurizio OM Ongaro PATAGONIA E BOOK W UNPUBLISHED FOTOS MAPS TEXTS Formato Kindle 6 November 2011 eBook Kindle Adventures in Patagonia a missionary s exploring trip Titus Coan 1880 Library of Congress Control Number 03009975 A list of writings relating to Patagonia 320 21 Idle Days in Patagonia by William Henry Hudson Chapman and Hall Ltd London 1893External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Patagonia nbsp Wikisource has the text of The New Student s Reference Work article Patagonia Gallery of photos from Patagonia Jakub Polomski Photography Photos from Chilean Patagonia 2008 2011 by Jorge Uzon Patagonia Nature Photo Gallery Landscapes flora and fauna from Argentina and Chile Patagon Journal magazine about Patagonia Aborigines of Patagonia Backpacking Patagonia series of articles about solo hiking in Patagonia 41 S 68 W 41 S 68 W 41 68 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Patagonia amp oldid 1192232844, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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