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California & West Coast. Introduction Natural Environment West Coastal Pacific Culture History. Introduction. Geographically and ecologically defined: The archaeological subarea of California Corresponds roughly with the state of California Includes portions of Extreme western Arizona
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California & West Coast Introduction Natural Environment West Coastal Pacific Culture History
Introduction • Geographically and ecologically defined: • The archaeological subarea of California • Corresponds roughly with the state of California • Includes portions of • Extreme western Arizona • Adjacent portions of extreme northwestern Mexico (the Mexican states of: Sonora and Baja California del Norte) • Note:, within the Estados Unidos Mexicanos two of their states exist on the peninsula of Baja California: Baja California del Sur and Baja California del Norte.
Characteristic subsistence • Subsistence tended to be dominated by local resource availability • Coastal peoples tended to extensively exploit marine and seacoast resources • Sea mammals • Fish • Shellfish
Tools reflected • Procurement • Fishhooks • Lances • Media (i.e., material) • Abalone shell • Whale bone, etc.
Interior valley • Extensively exploited and concentrated upon wild acorns. • Acorn utilization: • Acorns are a good source of food, but are very rich in tannic acid • Thus, prior to consumption, they require a fairly sophisticated set of processes: • Shelling • Soaking (repeatedly bathed and cleaned to leach out the tannic acid) • Drying, Pounding, Cooking
Technology for acorn exploitation • Pounding stones • Nutting stones (stones with hole depressions where nuts are placed so they won't fly off when hit with a pounding stone) • Watertight baskets: • For soaking and leaching • For boiling (using hot stones—stone boiling) • For storage • Grinding stones: • Manos and metates • Mortars and pestles
Pomo baskets, mortar and pestle Edward Curtis Collection, LOC
Northwest California • Similar in some ways to the Northwest Coast cultures: • Maritime-riverine subsistence • Woodworking emphasis • Preoccupation with wealth • Languages: • Athabaskan • Algonquin • Exemplary culture: • Prehistoric: Point St. George Site • Ethnographic: Yurok, Karok, Wiyot, Tolowa
Prehistoric Fish Traps, CA Ahjumawi Lava Springs State Park. http://www.parks.ca.gov/default.asp?page_id=23129
These tule blinders were worn by Ajumawi men during night fishing expeditions. They shaded the eyes from torch light and allowed better vision to spear or trap. http://www.parks.ca.gov/default.asp?page_id=23127
These basket traps were part of an elaborate kit of fishing materials developed by the Ajumawi. They are preserved in the Field Museum in Chicago. http://www.parks.ca.gov/default.asp?page_id=23127
The Ahjumawi stone fish traps are constructed of vasicular basalt rocks from the cold water springs. The walls channel the spawning fish into a series of chambers where eggs are deposited in the crevices of smaller gravel. The spring flow provides beneficial oxygen to the developing eggs. http://www.parks.ca.gov/default.asp?page_id=23127
California State Parks is working with native Ajumawi residents to preserve the unique stone fish traps and more fully understand their use. http://www.parks.ca.gov/default.asp?page_id=23127
A large boulder of vesicular basalt can be found along the shore at Ahjumawi Lava Springs State Park. It has been pitted with scores of small cupules, thought to be a result of ancient religious practices. http://www.parks.ca.gov/default.asp?page_id=23133
These tule sandals are preserved in the Field Museum in Chicago. They were collected from Ajumawi fishermen around 1902 by Dr. John Hudson. http://www.parks.ca.gov/default.asp?page_id=23127
Eel River Archaeology A complex panel of rock art designs was recorded at the site. The panel measures 253 cm wide and 150 cm from the ground level to the top. A tremendous complexity in motifs and figures is represented. http://www.parks.ca.gov/?page_id=23165
Circles, linked diamonds, tally marks and abstract shapes are also very common elements http://www.parks.ca.gov/?page_id=23165
Central California • Central Valley • Many societies sharing social customs • Basketry, House form, Technical processes (i.e., acorn processing) • Fair amount of cultural sharing with peoples of the Great Basin • Languages: • Penutian speakers • Exemplary culture: Prehistoric: Windmiller • Ethnographic: Wintun, Miwok, Yokut
Windmiller site and Complex • 4,000-2,500 BP • Cemetaries with elaborate grave goods, red ochre and shell beads. • Sites have manos, metates, bone tools, stone tools and clay cooking balls. • Bone remains include deer, elk, pronghorn, rabbit, waterfowl, and salmon.
Southern California Coastal tradition • Marine subsistence • Languages: • Shoshonean • Yuman • Exemplary culture: • Canalino Culture (Prehistoric) • Chumash (Ethnographic)
Eel Point, CA • Eel Point is located on San Clemente Island in California. • It was occupied from 7040 B.C. to 1400 A.D. and was "one of the longest sequences of near-continuous marine resource exploitation on the west coast of North America”.
How did people get to San Clemente? • Located in a deep ocean basin and never closer to the mainland. • Watercraft of some kind was used to reach the island, though no evidence of what that may have been.
Morrow Bay: 8,000 years • An 8000 year old site at Cayucos containing only mussel and abalone shows us that early inhabitants focused on collecting shellfish from the rocky intertidal zone. • People living closer to the newly formed bay began to take advantage of estuarine resources. Fish were commonly caught with hook and line. • Various seeds, including grasses, tarweed, and red maids, also contributed to the diet and were ground on flat milling slabs with hand-held manos.
Artifacts From Morrow Bay Manos and metates
Morrow Bay Milling slab
Shell Artifacts from Morrow Bay Mussel shells Shell bead necklace
Southern Desert California traditions • Shares much with the Southwest: • Pottery • Maize agriculture • Sand painting
San Dieguito and the Harris Site • Excavations at the Harris Site confirmed Rogers' main conclusions and obtained radiocarbon dates that placed the site's occupation as far back as 8200 B.C. • Characteristics suggested for San Dieguito Complex assemblages • abundant scrapers, • large, percussion-flaked bifaces; • flaked crescent stones; • Lake Mohave or Silver Lake style projectile points; • a scarcity or absence of milling tools (manos and metates); • and an absence of small projectile points and pottery.
San Dieguito Complex http://www.sdrvc.org/pdfs/Newsletter-MAY-2004.pdf
Harris Site http://www.sdrvc.org/pdfs/Newsletter-MAY-2004.pdf
Rock Mortars http://www.sdrvc.org/pdfs/Newsletter-MAY-2004.pdf
California prehistory and ethnohistory • May provide an example of "optimally efficient" hunting-and-gathering societies, capable of sustaining: • Dense population levels • Sedentary village life • Sophisticated "political-economic arrangements of some scale"
Analogue to • Caldwell's "Primary Forest Efficiency" in the Eastern Woodlands • Other intensive foraging societies such as those of the Pacific Northwest Coast (discussed already) • They represent optimal examples of what it means to be: • "Archaic" in the New World • "Mesolithic" in the Old World
At the time of Contact • California was an ethnic and linguistic patchwork quilt of societies. • Spanish accounts speak of sizeable stable villages • Villages exhibited social stratification