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Location | Southern Chile |
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Coordinates | 40°34′12″S 73°06′14″W / 40.57000°S 73.10389°W |
Type | open-air |
History | |
Associated with | [First American Settlers] |
Events | Younger Dryas impact (claimed)[1] |
Site notes | |
Excavation dates | 2007–present |
Archaeologists | Mario Pino Quivira (leader) and others |
Ownership | Bienes Nacionales de Chile |
Management | Austral University of Chile and Ilustre Municipalidad de Osorno |
Public access | Partial |
Pilauco is a paleontological and archaeological site located in the city of Osorno in Southern Chile.[2] The site contains both human made lithic artifacts and megafauna remains–including gomphotheres.[2] All the horizons containing megafauna and evidence of human activity date to the late Pleistocene. The calibrated radiocarbon dates indicate there was human activity in the site between 16,400 and -12,800 cal years B.P.[2]
The site was claimed to contain evidence for the disputed Younger Dryas impact hypothesis.[3][1]
Most of the stone artifacts found in Pilauco are made of volcanic rock such as dacite, rhyodacite and rhyolite from the Puyehue-Cordón Caulle Volcanic Complex immediately east in the Andes. Yet these rocks were imported by humans to the site as nearby rivers have not transported it.[4]