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![]() American AnthropologistVolume 107 Issue 4, Pages 677 - 683 Published Online: 18 Apr 2008 © 2009 American Anthropological Association Published on behalf of the American Anthropological Association
Abstract | References | Full Text: PDF (Size: 1335K) | Related Articles | Citation Tracking Beads, Bifaces, and Boats: An Early Maritime Adaptation on the South Coast of San Miguel Island, California Copyright 2005 American Anthropological Association. KEYWORDS Early Holocene • shell midden • maritime adaptations • fishing technologies • shell beads ABSTRACTTerminal Pleistocene and Early Holocene sites on California's Channel Islands provide evidence for early maritime activity, including the use of seaworthy boats. Numerous early shell middens have been identified, but specific information on the maritime peoples who occupied them is limited. Our research at CA-SMI-608, a roughly 9,500-year-old shell midden on San Miguel Island, produced a relatively large assemblage of bifaces and other chipped stone artifacts, shell beads, worked bone, and well-preserved faunal remains. Food remains are dominated by mussels, abalones, and other shellfish from the rocky intertidal, but fish, sea mammal, and sea bird remains were also recovered. These data provide a detailed view of early maritime activities along an arid coastline previously considered marginal to human settlement. |
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