The Indigenous Chumash people of the California coast relied heavily upon the wealth of maritime resources that the Santa Barbara Channel provided. In order to access these vast resources , the use of advanced sewn vessels , known as the Tomol , were used and were of inestimable importance to the formation of their complex society. It is the purpose of this thesis to analyze the evidence of these vessels at the village site of Helo' (site CA-SBA-46) on Mescalatin Island in order to determine what effects Spanish colonization and missionization had on this integral technology. Additionally , this thesis attempts to synthesis a number of different lines of evidence in order to make such determinations. This includes physical remains of ve...
In 1968, Richard Gould presented ethnographic evidence that certain canoes were specifically made fo...
This 1942 Bureau of American Ethnology report discusses the differences in coastal topography and th...
Rather than simply an arena for Euroamerican domination, recent archaeological research on Spanish m...
The Indigenous Chumash people of the California coast relied heavily upon the wealth of maritime res...
This volume highlights the latest research on the foundations of sociopolitical complexity in coasta...
In 2015 and 2016 we conducted an archaeological research project at Audubon Canyon Ranch’s Toms Poin...
California’s northern Channel Islands have one of the longest and best-preserved archaeological reco...
As archaeology turns to the study of sustained colonialism, researchers are reassessing sites occupi...
The Chumash living in the Santa Barbara Channel region at the time of European contact in AD 1542, a...
This dissertation explores an intercultural engagement and its material aftermath, as well as larger...
The purpose of this paper is to fill in some of the missing information about these two Chumash cano...
Bulletin 151 of the Smithsonian Institution, Bureau of American Ethnology, provides a detailed descr...
The Channel Islands were continuously occupied by Native Americans for at least 13,000 years. During...
International audience"In the Americas, long before the Conquest, existed various native navigation ...
This dissertation aims to place California Indian agency and artistry at the forefront of California...
In 1968, Richard Gould presented ethnographic evidence that certain canoes were specifically made fo...
This 1942 Bureau of American Ethnology report discusses the differences in coastal topography and th...
Rather than simply an arena for Euroamerican domination, recent archaeological research on Spanish m...
The Indigenous Chumash people of the California coast relied heavily upon the wealth of maritime res...
This volume highlights the latest research on the foundations of sociopolitical complexity in coasta...
In 2015 and 2016 we conducted an archaeological research project at Audubon Canyon Ranch’s Toms Poin...
California’s northern Channel Islands have one of the longest and best-preserved archaeological reco...
As archaeology turns to the study of sustained colonialism, researchers are reassessing sites occupi...
The Chumash living in the Santa Barbara Channel region at the time of European contact in AD 1542, a...
This dissertation explores an intercultural engagement and its material aftermath, as well as larger...
The purpose of this paper is to fill in some of the missing information about these two Chumash cano...
Bulletin 151 of the Smithsonian Institution, Bureau of American Ethnology, provides a detailed descr...
The Channel Islands were continuously occupied by Native Americans for at least 13,000 years. During...
International audience"In the Americas, long before the Conquest, existed various native navigation ...
This dissertation aims to place California Indian agency and artistry at the forefront of California...
In 1968, Richard Gould presented ethnographic evidence that certain canoes were specifically made fo...
This 1942 Bureau of American Ethnology report discusses the differences in coastal topography and th...
Rather than simply an arena for Euroamerican domination, recent archaeological research on Spanish m...