Pollen analysis of two sediment records from a coastal swamp forest site in the Chilean semiarid region (31°50′S; 71°28′W) shows an alternation of dry and wet phases during the past ∼6100 cal yr B.P. The most prominent vegetation changes occur at ∼4200 cal yr B.P., with the expansion of the swamp forest taxa Luma chequen and Escallonia sp., followed by a regression of the forest beginning at ∼3200 cal yr B.P. and ending with its replacement by a xerophytic scrub, between ∼1800 and 1300 cal yr B.P. The swamp forest reexpanded after ∼1300 cal yr B.P. and persisted, with minor variation, until the present. We interpret the establishment of the swamp forest at the study site to be the result of a rising watertable in response to increased rainfalls from ∼4200 cal yr B.P. onward. Our results indicate that in north-central Chile the second half of the Holocene was climatically more variable than previously thought, suggesting significant changes in the position and/or intensity of the wester