Shellfish, Geophytes, and Sedentism on Early Holocene Santa Rosa Island, Alta California, USA

TitleShellfish, Geophytes, and Sedentism on Early Holocene Santa Rosa Island, Alta California, USA
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2019
AuthorsErlandson, JM, Rick, TC, Ainis, AF, Gill, KM, Jew, NP, Reeder-Myers, LA
JournalThe Journal of Island and Coastal Archaeology
Pagination1 - 21
Date PublishedMar-03-2021
ISSN1556-4894
Abstract

Archaeobotanical remains recovered from a large ∼8000-year-old-shell midden (CA-SRI-666) on Santa Rosa Island provide the first ancient plant data from this large island, shedding light on ancient patterns of plant use, subsistence, and sedentism. Faunal data from shell midden samples retrieved from three site loci contain evidence for harvesting of rocky intertidal shellfish and estuarine clams and oysters from a paleo-estuary in the vicinity. CA-SRI-666 appears to have been an Early Holocene village site occupied year round. A key to the development of early sedentary societies on the island may have been geophytes, especially Brodiaea-type corms, which provided an abundant source of carbohydrates and calories that complemented marine resources rich in fat and whole animal proteins. Our data demonstrate the value of integrating paleobotanical and zooarchaeological data from island and coastal archaeological sites to help elucidate human social, cultural, and environmental dynamics, including sedentism.

URLhttps://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/15564894.2019.1579272?journalCode=uica20
DOI10.1080/15564894.2019.1579272