A Canyon Through Time: Archaeology, History, and Ecology of the Tecolote Canyon Area, Santa Barbara County, CaliforniaUniversity of Utah Press, 16/09/2008 - 197 páginas Long a refuge for bootleggers and hobos, Tecolote Canyon was engulfed by an industrialized oil boom for twenty years beginning in the 1930s, and endured the only Japanese attack on the contiguous U.S. during World War II. In the postindustrial era, the lower canyon was a haven for surfers, nudists, and gravediggers before being transformed into a five-star resort in the 1990s. But this beautiful area of California’s Santa Barbara coast has been occupied by humans for at least 9,000 years. Known by the Chumash Indians as Hel’apunitse (guitar fish), the canyon was a major nexus of Chumash village life from about 2000 to 500 years ago. After the arrival of Europeans, the canyon passed from Chumash hands through successive Spanish, Mexican, and American administrations. In A Canyon through Time, the authors summarize the deep history of this beautiful canyon, which serves as a fascinating history in microcosm of the California coastal region. Using data from archaeology, ecology, geology, geography, and history, they weave an interdisciplinary tale of the natural and human prehistory and history of the Tecolote Canyon area. |
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Índice
| 7 | |
| 31 | |
| 67 | |
History and Historical Archaeology | 101 |
Power Place and HistoryTecolote Canyon through Time | 128 |
Additional Figure and Tables | 149 |
Area Archaeological Sites 130 A 15 Olivella Bead Detritus from Tecolote | 164 |
Dietary Reconstruction for Faunal Remains A 29 Dietary Reconstruction for Faunal Remains | 179 |
Glossary | 185 |
Palavras e frases frequentes
14C dates abalone archaeological sites archaeologists asphaltum assemblage Bacara Barbara Channel area Barbareño beach Biface bone burials cal bp California Coast California mussel Canaliño cemetery chert Chione chipped-stone artifacts Chumash coastal plain cultural deposits Early Holocene Erlandson estuaries evidence excavations faunal remains fish fragments Goleta Slough habitats human hunting identified King Late Holocene located manos Marine shell mash materials Meat Yield metates Middle Holocene Milling Stone mortar mouth of Tecolote northern obsidian Olivella percent pestles Pismo clam Radiocarbon Dates recovered relatively Rogers Rogers’s RYBP Sandstone Santa Barbara Channel Santa Barbara Coast Santa Ynez Mountains Saxidomus screen recovery sea mammals shale shell midden shellfish shovel test pits soil southern site area suggest surface Tecolote and Winchester Tecolote area Tecolote Canyon area Tecolote Creek test units tion Tivela tool-making debris UCSB undifferentiated variety Vellanoweth Venus clam village Weight western Santa Barbara Winchester Canyon

