Ángela Loij López[1] (c. 1900 – 18 May 1974), baptized as Ángela Gómez, was an Argentine-Chilean woman considered to be the last surviving individual of full-blooded Selk'nam (Ona) descent, an indigenous group that resided in Tierra del Fuego.
She participated in a traditional Hain ceremony documented in 1924 by Austrian ethnologist Martin Gusinde.
[2] During the late 1930s, she joined missionaries and was baptized to leave her conflictive relationship with her husband.
[6][7][2] Loij was found dead in her home in May 1974, victim of a stroke she suffered at dawn.
[3] A school in the Río Grande Department was named in her honour.