Publication | Closed Access
Boats, Bones, and Biface Bias: The Early Holocene Mariners of Eel Point, San Clemente Island, California
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Citations
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References
2004
Year
Coastal EngineeringEngineeringSustainable FisheryArchaeologyOceanographyBiface BiasCommercial FishingBioarchaeologyArchaeological RecordMaritime TradeLanguage StudiesSouthern California CoastCoastal Southern CaliforniaHistorical ArchaeologyFishery ScienceEel PointSeafood IndustryFishery EnforcementCoastal ManagementMarine EcologyAnthropologyMarine BiologyEarly Holocene MarinersMaritime Archaeology
By 8000 B.P., sea-mammal hunting and open-sea voyages were established at Eel Point, San Clemente Island, California. The early inhabitants of Eel Point depended heavily on sea-mammal hunting and shellfish collecting, rather than the intensive fishing that developed during the Late Holocene along the Southern California coast. Eel Point technological capabilities rivaled those of Late Holocene groups such as the Chumash Indians, including the ability to fabricate sophisticated watercraft. These data question traditional models of progressive maritime cultural development in coastal Southern California, and reveal the need for more empirical methods of assessing the seafaring capabilities of ancient maritime populations.
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