Grupo de patagones en puerto Peckett. An 1832 drawing made during the voyage of Jules Dumont d'Urville., for article on Patagonia settlement

Early humans reach Patagonia, ancestors of the Aónikenk people

Around 12,500 B.C.E., bands of hunter-gatherers pushed into one of the most remote corners of the Americas — the cold, windswept steppe of Patagonia, at the southern tip of South America. They were among the first human beings to set foot in a landscape no member of our species had ever seen. The descendants of these early arrivals would eventually become the diverse Indigenous peoples of Patagonia, including the Aónikenk — also known as the Tehuelche — whose presence in the region endures to this day.

Key findings

  • Patagonia settlement: Archaeological and genetic evidence places the earliest human presence in Patagonia at roughly 12,500 B.C.E., among the southernmost reaches of the initial peopling of the Americas.
  • Aónikenk identity: The Aónikenk, one of the groups later classified under the broad “Tehuelche complex,” occupied the southern stretches of Patagonia from the Chubut region to the Strait of Magellan, developing a distinct language and nomadic culture over millennia.
  • Tehuelche complex: Researchers use the term “Tehuelche complex” to group several related but linguistically distinct peoples of Patagonia and the Pampas, reflecting cultural similarities and geographic proximity rather than a single unified origin.

Who were the first Patagonians

The peopling of the Americas followed one of the longest and most remarkable migrations in human history. Beginning perhaps 20,000–15,000 B.C.E. or earlier, people crossed from northeastern Asia into the Americas — by land bridge, coastal routes, or both. By roughly 12,500 B.C.E., their descendants had traveled the entire length of two continents, reaching the cold plateaus and coastal grasslands at the bottom of the world.

Patagonia is not an easy place to live. Wind scours the open steppe. Winters are harsh. Game is mobile and wide-ranging. But the people who arrived here were already expert foragers, adapted to cold and open environments. Archaeological sites across South America suggest these early populations moved quickly, adapted nimbly, and left traces of their presence from the Andes to the Atlantic coast.

The ancestors of the Aónikenk were part of this deep human story. Over thousands of years, distinct cultural and linguistic identities crystallized across the region. By the time European explorers arrived in the 16th century C.E., the peoples of Patagonia had been living, hunting, and moving through this landscape for more than 140 centuries.

A people defined by movement

The Aónikenk — the name means something close to “people of the south” or “people of the west,” depending on the source — were a nomadic people who organized their lives around seasonal movement. They followed guanaco herds across the steppe, hunted rheas, gathered plant foods, and built a rich oral culture over generations.

Their social world was organized around small, mobile bands rather than fixed settlements. This was not a lack of complexity — it was a profound adaptation to an environment where resources were spread thin and unpredictably. Archaeological evidence from Patagonia shows continuity in tool traditions, rock art, and subsistence strategies stretching back thousands of years, suggesting deep cultural roots long before contact with outsiders.

When Ferdinand Magellan’s expedition reached the San Julián Bay in 1520 C.E., the chronicler Antonio Pigafetta recorded an encounter with tall, powerfully built people he called “Patagoni” — a name that would eventually give the entire region its European label. These were almost certainly Tehuelche-related peoples. Spanish accounts marveled at their stature and described elaborate body paint and guanaco-skin cloaks.

The name “Tehuelche” itself likely came from the Mapuche language — probably from chewel che, meaning “brave people” or “rugged people.” It was an outsider’s label. The people themselves used terms like Aónikenk, Gününa-küne, and others depending on their group and region.

A landscape of many peoples

Researchers have long debated how to classify the diverse Indigenous peoples of Patagonia and the Pampas. The “Tehuelche complex” is a scholarly grouping — useful for broad comparison, but not a precise ethnic or linguistic unit. The languages spoken by these groups were not all related to each other. Their geographic ranges were vast. And centuries of interaction, migration, and intermarriage meant that identities shifted and blended over time.

One major influence was the Mapuche people, who moved into Patagonia from what is now Chile beginning in the 17th century C.E. Many Tehuelche peoples adopted horses — introduced to the Americas by the Spanish — and some absorbed Mapuche cultural practices, a process historians call “Araucanization.” This exchange reshaped the cultural landscape of southern South America significantly before European colonization reached its most destructive phase.

Researchers and Indigenous organizations continue to document the complexity of Tehuelche identity, including the ongoing survival of descendants who identify with these traditions today.

Lasting impact

The Aónikenk and their relatives were the original stewards of one of Earth’s most dramatic landscapes. Their knowledge of Patagonian ecology — its animals, plants, weather patterns, and seasonal rhythms — accumulated over more than 12,000 years. That depth of relationship with the land represents a form of knowledge that no outside observer could replicate in a short span of time.

Their presence also shaped how the world came to imagine the far south. European accounts of “giant Patagonians” circulated widely for centuries, influencing mapmakers, philosophers, and writers. The reality was less fantastical but more interesting: a resourceful, adaptable people who had thrived in conditions most Europeans found inhospitable.

Today, Aónikenk and Tehuelche descendants live primarily in cities and towns of Argentine Patagonia. Community organizations work to revitalize languages, recover cultural practices, and assert land rights. The 2022 C.E. recognition framework in Argentina for Indigenous territorial rights has provided some communities with new legal tools, though implementation remains uneven.

Blindspots and limits

The historical record of the Aónikenk and related peoples was almost entirely shaped by outsiders — Spanish colonizers, Jesuit missionaries, European explorers, and later Argentine military officials. These observers brought their own assumptions and often misread, collapsed, or erased distinctions that mattered deeply to the people themselves. The “Tehuelche complex” as a scholarly category reflects the limits of outside observation as much as any underlying cultural unity.

The 19th century C.E. was catastrophic for these communities. Argentina’s “Conquest of the Desert” — a military campaign from 1878–1879 C.E. — was explicitly aimed at eliminating Indigenous resistance to colonization in Patagonia and the Pampas. Historians document mass killings, forced displacement, and the destruction of traditional economies. Contact with outsiders also introduced infectious diseases — smallpox, measles — to which these populations had no prior immunity, causing devastating epidemics well before the military campaigns. These losses cannot be separated from the story of Patagonia’s first peoples.

Read more

For more on this story, see: Wikipedia — Tehuelche people

For more from Good News for Humankind, see:

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