Changes in social organization accelerated on California's northern Channel Islands beginning around 1300 cal BP. These changes were associated with shifts in settlement and subsistence patterns related in part to drought conditions during the Medieval Climatic Anomaly (MCA; 1150-600 cal BP). By the end of the MCA, settlement patterns demonstrate evidence for territoriality and can be described by the ideal despotic distribution. The occupants of the most productive habitats prevented new settlers from moving in and accessing the available resources. We use faunal data from five sites on western Santa Rosa Island (CA-SRI-15, -31, −97, −313, and −333) to trace changes in settlement and population aggregation through this period. Fishing, whi...
In recent years, paleoethnobotanical research on the Northern Channel Islands of California has chal...
California’s northern Channel Islands have one of the longest and best-preserved archaeological reco...
As the focus of intense debate concerning the possible effects of environmental variability on Nativ...
Using targeted survey, excavation, and radiocarbon dating, we assess the extent to which human settl...
This paper presents the analysis of faunal remains from four sites on the west end of Santa Cruz Isl...
This dissertation evaluates the ecology of low population density forager territoriality through the...
Archaeologists working on the northern Channel Islands of California have proposed that during the L...
One of the central and ongoing efforts of contemporary archaeology lies in identifying explanatory m...
Subsistence strategies of the hunter-gatherer-fishers who inhabited the Northern Channel Islands hav...
California's Channel Islands have a lengthy archaeological record, spanning roughly 13,000 calendar ...
A robust collection of mammal, bird, fish, and shellfish remains from an 8,000-year residential sequ...
The Chumash, complex marine hunter-gathers of the Santa Barbara Channel region, have occupied both t...
Data from excavations at five sites in southern Santa Clara Valley provide several interesting insig...
This archaeological dissertation research project integrates a rigorous chronological framework, geo...
The nature of and responses to population-resource imbalances have played an important role in debat...
In recent years, paleoethnobotanical research on the Northern Channel Islands of California has chal...
California’s northern Channel Islands have one of the longest and best-preserved archaeological reco...
As the focus of intense debate concerning the possible effects of environmental variability on Nativ...
Using targeted survey, excavation, and radiocarbon dating, we assess the extent to which human settl...
This paper presents the analysis of faunal remains from four sites on the west end of Santa Cruz Isl...
This dissertation evaluates the ecology of low population density forager territoriality through the...
Archaeologists working on the northern Channel Islands of California have proposed that during the L...
One of the central and ongoing efforts of contemporary archaeology lies in identifying explanatory m...
Subsistence strategies of the hunter-gatherer-fishers who inhabited the Northern Channel Islands hav...
California's Channel Islands have a lengthy archaeological record, spanning roughly 13,000 calendar ...
A robust collection of mammal, bird, fish, and shellfish remains from an 8,000-year residential sequ...
The Chumash, complex marine hunter-gathers of the Santa Barbara Channel region, have occupied both t...
Data from excavations at five sites in southern Santa Clara Valley provide several interesting insig...
This archaeological dissertation research project integrates a rigorous chronological framework, geo...
The nature of and responses to population-resource imbalances have played an important role in debat...
In recent years, paleoethnobotanical research on the Northern Channel Islands of California has chal...
California’s northern Channel Islands have one of the longest and best-preserved archaeological reco...
As the focus of intense debate concerning the possible effects of environmental variability on Nativ...