At the eastern edge of Isla Grande de Tierra del Fuego, the Haush (Manek'enk) of the Mitre Peninsula carved a life from wind, surf and rocky coves. Archaeological deposits at Caleta Falsa and Río Policarpo contain shell middens, hearths and worked bone that date into a regional horizon centered around 1280 CE and continuing into the early 19th century. These deposits show repeated seasonal use of sheltered bays, intensive exploitation of seals and seabirds, and manufacture of bone harpoons and scraping tools.
Limited evidence suggests the Haush were a late-Holocene coastal adaptation of Fuegian hunter-gatherers rather than a recent immigrant population. Archaeological data indicates strong continuity in tool types and site placement across centuries, but the archaeological record is patchy: many sites are eroded or submerged, and careful stratigraphic control is not always possible. Radiocarbon dates from shell and charcoal anchor the Mitre Peninsula Haush Culture to the interval 1280–1820 CE, but connections to earlier inland groups on Tierra del Fuego remain uncertain.
In evocative terms, the Haush emergence is a story of people shaping lives around tide and ice—small social groups reading seasons by currents and bird migrations. Scientifically, however, this narrative rests on a modest set of sites and thus requires cautious interpretation and further fieldwork.