Californias San Miguel Island contains over 600 archaeological sites, some occupied as early as 12,000 yr ago and most located along the islands north coast. Archaeologists have long believed the south coast to have been marginal or largely uninhabited. Burial of some landforms by sand dunes deposited after historical overgrazing, the lack of systematic survey, and a dearth of radiocarbon dating have also contributed to an underestimation of the intensity of human land use along the south coast of San Miguel Island. Our recent reconnaissance and dating of shell middens on the islands south coast indicate more intensive occupation than previously thought, with numerous south coast sites spanning at least the past 9000 yr, and demonstrate the...
"Archaeologists have long been interested in understanding the antiquity and evolution of human occu...
This thesis explores aspects of the archaeology of coastal California. Drawing on a large body of da...
The Channel Islands were continuously occupied by Native Americans for at least 13,000 years. During...
California’s northern Channel Islands have one of the longest and best-preserved archaeological reco...
If we are to more completely understand the development of the native cultures of the California coa...
We provide detailed contextual information on 25 14C dates for unusually well-preserved archaeologic...
The northern Pacific Coast is an important area for understanding human colonization of the Americas...
Despite dramatic growth in the number of Terminal Pleistocene and Early Holocene sites known from Ca...
Thesis (M.A.) California State University, Los Angeles, 2012Committee members: Ren?? L. Vellano...
Access restricted to the OSU CommunityTwo national commissions recently concluded that the world's o...
Over the years, the authors have been doing background research, survey, data recovery, and collecti...
We present a Holocene radiocarbon chronology of hunter-gatherer occupation based on contemporaneous ...
A summary of research in the southern Channel Islands of California is presented. This research show...
California's Channel Islands have a lengthy archaeological record, spanning roughly 13,000 calendar ...
This material was digitized as part of a cooperative project between Radiocarbon and the University ...
"Archaeologists have long been interested in understanding the antiquity and evolution of human occu...
This thesis explores aspects of the archaeology of coastal California. Drawing on a large body of da...
The Channel Islands were continuously occupied by Native Americans for at least 13,000 years. During...
California’s northern Channel Islands have one of the longest and best-preserved archaeological reco...
If we are to more completely understand the development of the native cultures of the California coa...
We provide detailed contextual information on 25 14C dates for unusually well-preserved archaeologic...
The northern Pacific Coast is an important area for understanding human colonization of the Americas...
Despite dramatic growth in the number of Terminal Pleistocene and Early Holocene sites known from Ca...
Thesis (M.A.) California State University, Los Angeles, 2012Committee members: Ren?? L. Vellano...
Access restricted to the OSU CommunityTwo national commissions recently concluded that the world's o...
Over the years, the authors have been doing background research, survey, data recovery, and collecti...
We present a Holocene radiocarbon chronology of hunter-gatherer occupation based on contemporaneous ...
A summary of research in the southern Channel Islands of California is presented. This research show...
California's Channel Islands have a lengthy archaeological record, spanning roughly 13,000 calendar ...
This material was digitized as part of a cooperative project between Radiocarbon and the University ...
"Archaeologists have long been interested in understanding the antiquity and evolution of human occu...
This thesis explores aspects of the archaeology of coastal California. Drawing on a large body of da...
The Channel Islands were continuously occupied by Native Americans for at least 13,000 years. During...