“…Such settings may exist, such as river mouths or high peaks along the coast, or prominent near-shore islands along major movement pathways, like Isla Cedros, Isla Ángel de la Guarda, and Tiburón Island on the east and west sides of Baja California (e.g., Des Lauriers 2006 , 2011 ), or on the Channel Islands, which appear to have been reached quite early Johnston et al 2002 ). Bulls Scarp on the continental shelf off South Carolina may have also been such a setting, used for rendezvous and aggregation by early populations (Harris et al 2013 ). While the shorelines on the Atlantic and Gulf continental margins would not appear to have been favored settings for group rendezvous and aggregation during the Late Pleistocene, particularly during periods of peak shoreline change, this seems to have been less the case along the Atlantic than along the Gulf Coastal Plain, and only during some and not all periods.…”