Maritime subsistence at a 9300-year-old shell midden on Santa Rosa Island,California

Citation
Jm. Erlandson et al., Maritime subsistence at a 9300-year-old shell midden on Santa Rosa Island,California, J FIELD ARC, 26(3), 1999, pp. 255-265
Citations number
44
Categorie Soggetti
Archeology
Journal title
JOURNAL OF FIELD ARCHAEOLOGY
ISSN journal
00934690 → ACNP
Volume
26
Issue
3
Year of publication
1999
Pages
255 - 265
Database
ISI
SICI code
0093-4690(199923)26:3<255:MSAA9S>2.0.ZU;2-L
Abstract
A deeply buried shell midden (CA-SRI-6) on Santa Rosa Island, California ap pears to have been a residential campsite occupied about 9300 years ago. Al though few artifacts were recovered from this Early Holocene component, fau nal remains suggest a heavy reliance on marine resources, probably suppleme nted by terrestrial plant foods. Dietary reconstructions suggest that shell fish (especially abalone) provided about 85% of the estimated meat yields, fish about 14%, with birds and sea mammals each contributing less than 1%. These data suggest that Early Holocene adaptations on the Channel Islands w ere distinct from the coastal mainland in many ways and that maritime hunte r-gatherers had adapted to a variety of Pacific Coast habitats by the early time.