Daily Archives: March 3, 2011

HSU Don Pinpoints Prehistoric Evidence of Coastal Peoples

Coastal Paleoindian peoples fashioned crude tools while colonizingmc47 California islands 12,000 years ago.


By Paul Mann
Humboldt State

Primitive stone tools found on California coastal islands are evidence of seafaring and island colonization 12,000 years ago by Paleoindian peoples, according to a new report in Science magazine co-authored by Humboldt State University Professor of Anthropology Todd Braje.

Primitive artifacts, including barbed points and abraded bone tool fragments, were uncovered at archaeological sites on the Channel Islands, a shell midden (mound) on Santa Rosa Island and at the Cardwell Bluffs sites on San Miguel Island. They herald prehistoric coastal migrations into the Americas from Asia.

The findings are summarized in the Science article, “Paleoindian Seafaring, Maritime Technologies, and Coastal Foraging on California’s Channel Islands.”

 

Professor of Anthropology Todd Braje

 

According to Braje, “The lives of these early coastal foragers seem to have been those of shellfish gathering, bird hunting, fishing and the production of a unique set of maritime hunting equipment.”

These settlers’ way of life was very different from that of the prehistoric Big Game Hunter peoples previously thought to have been the first to enter the New World via the Bering Strait.

Braje and his colleagues uncovered a series of 12,000-year-old stone tool production and maritime hunting and foraging sites. The discoveries are crucial because they bridge an important chronological gap. Missing until now were subsistence and settlement Channel Island locations older than 11,500 years.

The 12,000-year-old artifacts Braje and his fellow scientists unearthed are tantalizing evidence of an early coastal migration in the New World. Importantly, they support a similar discovery in the 1990s, dated to 14,500 years ago at Monte Verde on the southern tip of Chile.

Combined, the discoveries at Monte Verde and the Channel Islands refute the notion that it was Big Game Hunters who were the first to cross the Bering Land Bridge, head from Siberia to North America, settle inland, and feed on mastodons, mammoths, and the like.

The groundwork of the Science article began in part in the summer of 2003 when, as Braje tells it, “The story on the Channel Islands started to become even more interesting.” While surveying the south coast of San Miguel, he and Jon Erlandson of the University of Oregon stumbled across a series of sites situated above a chert outcrop. Chert is microcrystalline sedimentary rock whose sharp fractures were used by early peoples to make cutting tools.

“What we found amazed us—a series of 12,000-year-old stone tool production sites,” Braje says. “Years of research had convinced us that the earliest chipped stone tools on the islands were crude, informal, and expedient. But the tools at these Cardwell Bluffs sites were thin, delicate, and exquisitely made by expert flint-knappers. In total, we have analyzed more than 400 stone projectile points, knives, and transverse projectile points (crescents).”

That same summer, Braje and Erlandson were lunching on the bluffs and decided on the spur of the moment to head to western Santa Rosa. The islands were not connected to the mainland 12,000 years ago, but lower sea levels at that time meant one could walk from eastern San Miguel to western Santa Rosa. In the years following 2003, further evidence turned up of Paleocoastal peoples, their technologies and a comparatively diversified maritime economy.

In addition, says Braje, “the Santa Rosa sites have produced an amazing array of faunal remains, suggesting that these technologies were used to hunt a diverse range of waterfowl and seabirds, and perhaps, for spearfishing.”

Braje has worked on archaeological projects all over North America, but most of his research has centered on the Northern Channel Islands and along mainland coastal California and Oregon. He is the author of Modern Oceans, Ancient Sites, which examines 10,000 years of human interactions with Channel Island marine and terrestrial ecosystems.

Currently, Braje is lead editor of the forthcoming volume, Human Impacts on Seals, Sea Lions, and Sea Otters, which for the first time brings together a diverse group of scientists to probe the deep history, ecology, and human exploitation of North Pacific sea mammal communities.

The Science article is posted in full at http://www.science.org.

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Break in the rain Friday

Raw from the NWS in Eureka:

AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE EUREKA CA
341 AM PST THU MAR 3 2011

.SYNOPSIS…SCATTERED SHOWERS WILL CONTINUE ACROSS NORTHWEST
CALIFORNIA INTO THIS EVENING. EXPECT A BRIEF BREAK IN THE SHOWERS
ON FRIDAY BEFORE A STORM BRINGS MORE RAIN FRIDAY NIGHT INTO
SATURDAY.

&&

.DISCUSSION…RADAR SHOWS SCATTERED SHOWERS DECREASING ACROSS
NORTHWEST CALIFORNIA THIS MORNING. SNOW LEVELS ARE AROUND 3500
FEET, BUT ACCUMULATIONS ARE EXPECTED TO BE MINIMAL TO NONE.
ACTIVITY WILL REMAIN MINIMAL DURING THE EARLY MORNING HOURS, BUT
INCREASE LATE IN THE MORNING AND DURING THE AFTERNOON AS A WEAK
IMPULSE PASSES THROUGH. RAISED POPS IN THE SHORT TERM TO BETTER
REFLECT THE CURRENT MODEL TRENDS. SNOW LEVELS WILL REMAIN NEAR
3500 FEET WITH HIGHER ELEVATIONS GETTING UP TO 2-3 INCHES THROUGH
THIS EVENING. QPF WILL BE HIGHEST NEAR THE CA/OR BORDER AND
GRADUALLY DECREASE FURTHER TO THE SOUTH. SHOWERS WILL WIND DOWN
LATE THIS EVENING INTO THE NIGHT AS THE IMPULSE MOVES FURTHER
INLAND. AFTER A BRIEF BREAK IN THE PRECIPITATION FRIDAY ANOTHER
DISTURBANCE WILL BRING RAIN TO THE REGION FRIDAY NIGHT INTO
SATURDAY. THIS WILL QUICKLY BE FOLLOWED BY A MORE POTENT STORM
SATURDAY NIGHT INTO SUNDAY MORNING, WHICH COULD DROP LARGE AMOUNTS
OF RAIN OVER THE AREA OVER A SHORT PERIOD OF TIME. MODELS STILL
SHOW SOME UNCERTAINTY WITH QPF AMOUNTS, BUT DECIDED TO BUMP UP
POPS TO 100 DURING THIS TIME PERIOD BECAUSE IT`S GOING TO RAIN.
IT`S JUST A MATTER OF HOW MUCH. LUCKILY SNOW LEVELS WILL BE AROUND
5000 FEET, SO SNOW ISN`T TOO BIG OF A CONCERN. HOWEVER, WILL HAVE
TO KEEP AN EYE ON THE RIVERS FOR RAPID RISES. RIGHT NOW THE RFC
KEEPS THEM ALL BELOW MONITOR STAGE. PRECIPITATION WILL GRADUALLY
WIND DOWN ON SUNDAY. LEFT THE LONG TERM FORECAST UNCHANGED. STROZ

&&

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