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Project 160 - Report - 1999-05-30 1 ARCHAEOLOGICAL MONITORING REPORT FOR CONSTRUCTION OF THE FAIRVIEW PARK SEWER PROJECT ' (CMSD#160 PROJECT NO 1112100-160) I Report prepared for City of Costa Mesa ' Department of Public Services/Engineering Division 77 Fair Drive P 0 Box 1200 Costa Mesa California 92628-1200 ' Report Prepared and Authored by Henry C Koerper ' Archaeological Consultant 632 S Chipwood Street Orange California 92869-5305 May 30 1999 ' U S G S Newport Beach California Quadrangle N3335-W11752 5/7 5 1965 (Photorevised 1972) Keywords monitoring sewer line swale Fairview Park no cultural resources 1 1 1 1 TABLE OF CONTENTS 1 Management Summary 1 Introduction 1 ' Setting 5 Cultural Background 6 Methods and Results 9 Recommendations 10 References Cited 11 1 1 1 I 1 1 1 1 1 1 LIST OF FIGURES 1 Figure 1 General location of monitoring area page 2 shown on USGS Newport Beach California Quadrangle map 1965 (Photorevised 1972) Figure 2 Location of trenches for the Fairview page 3 Park Sewer Project site 1 1 1 1 1 i 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 MANAGEMENT SUMMARY The methodologies and results of archaeological field monitoring for the Fairview Park Sewer Project conducted weekdays ' from April 12 1999 through May 4 1999 are summarized in this report which follows the suggested monitoring report outline promulgated by the Orange County Archaeological Forum Field monitoring was undertaken to protect the integrity of scientific ' information should cultural resources such as artifacts ecofacts or burials be discovered during trenching for the Fairview Park Sewer Project (CMSD#160) Further a shallow drainage swale north of Nancy Lane leading west from Canyon Drive and into Fairview Park was similarly checked No cultural resources were detected and thus trenching excavation work was never disrupted There were no cultural resources associated with the swale There are no further recommendations relating to this project ' INTRODUCTION ' The City of Costa Mesa Department of Public Services/Engineering Division retained the services of county certified archaeological consultant Henry C Koerper Ph D to ' provide for monitoring of the Fairview Park Sewer Project (CMSD#160) in conformance with the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA) the ordinances of Orange County and the city trenching ' permit These services were sought for the fact that Fairview Park is known to contain prehistoric cultural resources (Fig 1) including numerous burials Although the sewer construction was to occur well away from the presently interpreted boundaries of the 1 two recorded archaeological sites at Fairview Park the documented great significance of one of the sites and the presumed importance of the other required that the sewer pipeline excavations (Fig 2) ' be observed by personnel trained to recognize cultural remains and particularly human bone ' The two archaeological sites located within the 208 acre Fairview Park Master Plan are CA-Ora-58 and CA-Ora-506 Ora-58 which is known as the Fairview Site and has been designated by over a dozen other common names is located within Township 65 Range lOW east half of Section 8 on the 7 5 U S G S Newport Beach Quadrangle Map Universal Transverse Mercator (UTM) Coordinates are Zone 11 412690m Easting and 3725000m Northing It lies to t the west of Placentia Avenue Ora-506 is adjacent to and on the east side of Placentia Avenue 1 r , It I ----,H ' / / Mesa Verde �� i.-� �u—' L ±^ i //Co ntry�Clllb \\ ��� �1 I I ^I , • �� 1 + i —�� _ �fine Peals � br 1 Ian I /fJ /' �\ ` \\.�p`^I \/mss` '/ r :in',L �'s1M���� GN "N ' Saltjs ,:z i l(_ — 6sS�\\JI B �� �'cl I � I �f '. .I�- rloO =IC • //� /// 11 '�'��\ l I_ Y_ �o I �,s II "- or v•31 'S' MIL'Mc'L n r �// L-4,-. �_. —J—Ip_Lj/ I//4 ,41 II F Sch =�/ \ �- - M — -H.,59 °i .l y-— I—� -Ir66 ' j! 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IIlll tLia ■ �F' Tfal r,� MCNa Ia ��C , \ ��. ' F.' -- 99( 1 1974 II 4 1 1I C)1J E• -1.'1'4. pg. �S �. I. U h .p^'I S' a 95 sQ J h� ♦�N` 7` n c114,,, Li c u .1I Sfh'� (�q ENT R J��.; r'*>-4./12'l i �•®� p u,�y0l ST W .f ljtfary � ,\ \/). oodla I : Y.li hittieT p u 3 '2I - oM G. \ 9c 83.4 ^• Q r Sch '711 n e Park 10� p'�` \✓ \ -y f,;, i'1=_ lI 1674 IH :' e$Z 1. . � •1'1 1..I1'� 'Z 1, "I 1 7 ' 'Palkr l , IN \\ . x- i I SCALE 1 24000 0 1 MILE 1-- 1-1 F—v f--I l— I • - I 1000 0 1000 2000 3000 4000 5000 6000 7000 FEET I H H 1 0 1 KILOMETER IFigure 1 General location of monitoring area shown on USGS Newport Beach California IQuadrangle map 1965 (Photorevised 1972) 2 I 1 1 i i MH 9-► i -MH 10 Z 0 LO IP A C• MH 8-' 200m MH 3 / MH 7 -NANCY LN MH B CANYON DR 1 CA-ORA-58 S WALE-- .--PACIFIC AVE I I I I I 1 Figure 2 Location of trenches for the Fairview Park Sewer Project site I i 1 3 Ora-506 was recorded in 1975 by Dr Keith Dixon who believed the midden to be over 60cm deep in places and of greater areal ' extent than Ora-58 of which it might actually have been an extension Obviously then Ora-506 is assumed to be a site of major prehistoric interest ' The great significance of Ora-58 is well established The site contains a vast array of artifacts including many magico- religious items and many features including more than two hundred ' burial features (Anon 1937a 1937b 1938a 1938b Koerper 1993 Koerper Earle Mason and Apodaca 1996) When Earle and 0 Neil (1994) identified rancherias whose principal villages were located 1 along the Santa Ana River they gave special mention to Genga very likely the site of Ora-58 It is possible that CA-Ora-163 (the Griset Site) and CA-Ora-76 (the Adams-Fairview Site) together with ' Ora-58 comprised Genga Newport Bay was within the territory of Genga as indicated by the bay s original Spanish name Bolsa de Gengar Late Prehistoric ' sites around Newport Bay were presumed by Earle and 0 Neil (1994) to have been dependencies of Genga It is further likely that the northern San Joaquin Hills were within the territory of Genga ' (Koerper Mason and Peterson n d ) Ora-58 was an important trade center especially during the Late Prehistoric period when Mohave Indians from the Lower Colorado River transported goods there in ' a textiles for shell beads trade that also involved exchanges of luxury items between trade partners (Koerper and Hedges 1996) Although the lower Santa Ana River area is usually considered ' to have been occupied by Gabrielino peoples it was probably multi- ethnic and multi-lingual as indicated by Genga marriage ties to both Gabrielino and Juaneno rancherias Genga and other Santa Ana ' River political units appear to have been conduits of contact and exchange between the Gabrielino and Juaneno cultural areas and between the coast and the interior (Earle and 0 Neil 1994) The potential for the increased importance of Genga particularly in the Late Prehistoric period follows from the fact that CA-Ora-855 or Putuidem the "mother-village for the Juaneno of the San Juan Capistrano Valley may have been peopled from Genga In the Juaneno story of the founding of Putuidem, Father Boscana related that Oyaisn brought many families from Sejat a place seven or eight leagues away (presumably by traveled path) from Mission San Juan Capistrano to Putuidem, a village only about one half league to the north of the mission Colonization was in consequence of the rapid increase of population the annual ' production of seeds insufficient to maintain so great a number (Boscana 1978 83) It is likely that these migrants departed from within the orbit of Genga since it is seven or 1 eight leagues road distance from the Mission If Sejat was not Ora-58 it was probably nearby perhaps at Ora-163 (the Griset Site) or Ora-76 (the Adams-Fairview Site) all of which taken ' 4 together may have comprised Genga While Boscana did state that Sejat was northeast of the mission he obviously misspoke as only ' "northwest makes any sense It is against this background of great significance that a ' cautious approach is justified with regard to any excavation work in Fairview Park Those who carried out the work of monitoring are the following Henry C Koerper Ph D Geraldine Beavers Tyson ' Koerper ' SETTING Site elevation for Ora-506 runs between 50 and 75 feet above sea level and elevation for Ora-58 is about 65 to 75 feet above sea level Site exposure for Ora-506 is open undulating grassland Site exposure for Ora-58 is open area mostly flat save for the ' natural topography at the far north end and at the southern end of the core area where fill has been dumped Ora-58 is atop a bluff overlooking a river flood plain ' Plant associations expected for the immediate area during prehistoric times were a mix of coastal sage scrub and grasslands communities covering the village sites Nearby a riparian woodland ' environment was made possible by the Santa Ana River Grassland-herbland habitats have open grasslands with many 1 flowering annuals in the spring Grasses would have included Stiza pulchra Poa scabrella and Aristida divericata (Bailey 1954 59) The most important crop here was seeds and many small animals ' such as quail rodents and rabbits would have been trapped or shot in grassy areas Coastal sage scrub communities would have consisted of one to five foot tall half-shrubs and/or somewhat larger woodier plants Leading species would have been Artemisia californicae (California sagebrush) Encelia californica (Bush sunflower) Erigonom fasciculatum (California buckwheat) Salvia apiana (White sage) and Salvia leucophylla (Purple sage) (Bailey 1954 51) The people of Genga would have exploited an abundance of edible stems stalks and shoots from this community which also served as an important source of seeds Other kinds of edible vegetal foods were blossoms leaves and greens roots and bulbs and some berries As with grasslands quail rodents and rabbits were commonly ' hunted animals in this habitat Riparian woodland microenvironments contain cottonwoods ' willows sycamores and alders Herbs and grasses are frequent Food for human consumption included seeds acorns pollen blossoms and buds Several animals would also have been procured 5 1 in riparian habitats ' winterbourne (1968 10) noted that river bottom lands below and coastward from Ora-58 would have been cut here and there by meandering streams of salt water at high tide and sweet water when the tide was low " Thus a mix of some amount of freshwater marsh and saltmarsh estuary habitats was within easy walking distance Chace (1969 64) has noted that about 1 3 to 1 5 kilometers southwest of Ora-58 there was an extensive estuarine environment ' called Bitter Lake that was attached by a narrow estuary to Newport Bay These wetlands were once comparable in size to Anaheim Bay and Alamitos Bay and covered more acreage than either Bolsa Bay or ' Newport Bay In summary the area in and around Genga was rich in food resources for hunters/gatherers CULTURAL BACKGROUND Ethnographic Notes ' The historically known Gabrielino are traditionally listed as the ethnic group residing along the lower Santa Ana River (e g Kroeber 1925) yet since political entities on the Santa Ana River drainage in Orange County were likely the vehicles for exchange and other social interactions between Gabrielinos and Juanefios this crossroads territory as previously indicated might also be thought of as somewhat multi-ethnic and multi-lingual (see Earle and 0 Neil 1994) Mission marriage records demonstrate links between the two tribes (Earle and 0 Neil 1994) ' As tribal designations Gabrielino and Juaneno are working fictions indicating only two groupings of people one sharing Gabrielino-Fernandeno speech and many customs and the other sharing Luiseno-Juaneno speech and many customs Both groupings share cultural traits with one another Numerous separate socio- political entities comprise each "tribe " Both languages are of the Cupan group of the Takic family of the Uto-Aztecan Stock (Shipley 1978 see also Bright 1975) 1 Takic neighbors or near neighbors were the Fernandeflo (Cupan group) Cahuilla (Cupan group) Serrano (Serran group) and Luiseno (Cupan group) (Kroeber 1925 Plate 57) The Juaneno have often been considered a segment of the Luiseno (see White 1963 91) The best ' quick summaries of the Gabrielino/Fernandeno Cahuilla Serrano and Juaneno/Luiseno are those of Bean and Smith (1978a) Bean (1978) Bean and Smith (1978b) and Bean and Shipek 1978 ' respectively Major works covering the Gabrielino include Heizer (1968) Johnston (1962) and McCawley (1996) Major works covering the Luiseno include those of Sparkman (1908) Strong (1929) ' 6 1 Kroeber (1925) and White (1963) For the Juaneflo see especially Boscana (1978) ' The Gabrielino or Gabrielino/Juaneflo mix subsisted by hunting and gathering The most important food sources were either the oak tree (several species) which provided acorns or grasses which provided seeds Rabbits and deer have contributed important protein sources around the project area but being near the coast fish shellfish and marine mammals probably provided the major part of the animal protein food fare The autonomous socio-political units of the Gabrielinos and ' Juanefios are often referred to by a Spanish term rancheria Rancherias held discrete bounded territories within which there was a permanent or semi-permanent sedentary residential center The chief of each clan-based year-round settlement held a ' hereditary position and served as an administrator over political economic and religious functions ' Culture Chronology and Culture History Two schemes those of Wallace (1955) and Warren (1968) have dominated discussions of chronology building in Orange County (Koerper 1981 118-179) occasionally precipitating exchanges of viewpoints (e g Koerper and Drover 1983 Warren 1984 Koerper and 1 Drover 1984) King s scheme (1981 1990) for the Santa Barbara Channel area is occasionally referenced in the local literature particularly when time sensitive beads are a subject of discourse 1 (e g Gibson 1992 Gibson and King 1994) Here the nomenclature of Wallace (1955) is retained (viz Milling Stone Intermediate Late Prehistoric) with the generic and neutral designation 'period" replacing horizon" or "tradition Further archaeological cultures are referred to the Holocene divisions formulated by Erlandson (1988 see also Erlandson and Colton 1991 Erlandson 1997) Thus the Late Holocene in Orange County divides into the Intermediate and Late Prehistoric periods and the Milling Stone period spans all of the Middle Holocene and part of the Early Holocene It is most probably the case that people ranged over the coast along which the Santa Ana River exited from the Early Holocene through the Middle Holocene and Late Holocene No overview of culture history could possibly do justice to ' the complexity of local socio-cultural evolution but with that said major cultural events will be mentioned here and placed within the divisions of the Holocene proposed by Erlandson (1988) 1 Again some of the nomenclature reflects Wallace s scholarship The earliest cultural manifestations in Orange County recall ' what is termed San Dieguito culture in San Diego County and elsewhere San Dieguito culture is a manifestation of the Paleo- Coastal Tradition (Moratto 1984 90-92 104) which dates from 11 500 1 7 I I BP to around 8 500 BP (Colton and Erlandson 1991 Erlandson and I Moss 1994) Along the coast the florescence of this complex wanes during the mid-seventh millennium BP (e g Haynes et al 1967 Warren 1968) although San Dieguito-like components may continue for I a millennium or more (Gallegos 1987 23) Thus the San Dieguito begins at the terminal Pleistocene and continues well into the Early Holocene Some evidence from CA-Ora-64 at Newport Bay reflects San Dieguito culture ISince Malcolm Rogers first described (1929) and later renamed (1939) the San Dieguito the concept has undergone considerable I refinement (e g Warren 1967 1968) Added to the artifact inventory are such things as manos and metates (True 1958 262 Ezell 1983) ornamentation (Kaldenberg 1982) and asphaltum-hafted tools (Ezell 1977) Chipped stone tools include large leaf-shaped 1 points a variety of leaf-shaped knives large ovoid domed and rectangular end or side scrapers engraving tools and crescentics (Warren 1967) IThe next period the Milling Stone may have evolved directly from the San Dieguito (see Koerper et al 1991 60-61) It is I characterized by an abundance of manos and metates but there are not many projectile points by comparison The projectiles are spear and dart points which when found tend to be large leaf- shaped points There are shell stone and bone beads There is 1 an absence of evidence of food storage and cooking containers Crude choppers scrapers cutting tools and hammerstones are salient features of Milling Stone assemblages Discoidals I cogstones and spheres of granite are some of the artifacts presumed to relate to the superstructural component of behavior Bone and antler tools such as awls and flakers are infrequent finds I in Milling Stone sites Basketry is inferred by the presence of tarring pebbles and basketry impressions on asphalt frayuients The Intermediate period begins around the Middle Holocene-Late I Holocene interface and coincides with the introduction of the curved shell fishhook It is around this time for whatever reasons that the number of radiocarbon dates diminishes for I Newport Bay and for Bolsa Bay During this 4 000 to 3 000 BP period there are actually fewer dates compared to similar spans of time earlier in the Milling Stone period (Koerper et al n d ) I The Intermediate sees increased utilization of mortar and pestle while the mano-metate combination diminishes proportionately The basket hopper mortar is introduced Most I projectile points are dart points The bow and arrow may have been introduced at the very end of the Intermediate I The beginning of the Late Prehistoric period at about 1350 years BP coincides with the beginning of the expansion of residential settlement into the San Joaquin Hills The Late Prehistoric period was originally divided into two subperiods LP1 I8 I and LP2 based on a further expansion of major residential settlement in the San Joaquin Hills (Mason and Peterson 1994) LP2 ' begins at 650 years BP a time coinciding with the beginning of a decrease in the numbers of radiocarbon dates That decrease culminates in major Spanish contact circa 200 years BP Further ' it is at around beginning LP2 that people may have migrated from Genga to the San Juan Capistrano Valley area Such population shifts may be related to droughts that occurred during the Medieval Climatic Anomaly just preceding the Little Ice Age ' METHODS AND RESULTS ' Prior to monitoring activities the two monitors working under the direction of Dr Koerper were made aware of the inventory of material items associated with Ora 58 They also became familiar ' with the soil colors and textures associated with the midden of that site The most recurrent component within the midden which ' immediately identifies Ora 58 as an archaeological site is the shell from marine molluscs Indeed there are so many shellfish remains that Ora-58 is classified as a shell midden The ' monitors were especially sensitive for the need to temporarily halt mechanical equipment involved in trenching should even flecks of shell begin to turn up Soils in Fairview Park lacking shell are regarded as most probably sterile Monitors followed the trenching progress of the mechanical equipment inspecting the open cuts and searching the backdirt ' piles for any artifactual or ecofactual remains Trench depth varied from 4 25 meters to one meter and in width from one to about 1 35 meters Observations continued during the process of filling the trenches These straightforward procedures occurred from April 12 to April 16 April 19 to April 23 April 16 to April 30 and on May ' 3 and 4 Only one monitor was on location on any one day when construction was proceeding There were no disruptions of the sewer pipeline contractor s work since no manifestations of past cultural behavior ever appeared The excavated soils were culturally sterile throughout ' the project with not even a shell fraywent being identified The colors of the excavated soils differed from those of the site midden dirt Using the 10YR Hue page of the Munsell Soil Color Chart the chroma readings for the midden soils were consistently lower and the value readings were generally lower than what was observed in the pipeline trenches Midden dirt exhibited 9 1 a grayish look the Munsell descriptions being 10YR 4/2 (Hue value/chroma) and 10YR 5/2 dark grayish brown and grayish brown respectively The dirt from trenching generally ranged from 10YR 5/3 (brown) through 10YR 6/3 (pale brown) to 10YR 7/3 (very pale brown) All assessments were dry assessments ' Not part of the trenching for the sewer pipeline a swale (drainage channel) running west from Canyon Drive 91 meters to a ' 28 meter swale channel heading south into a culvert was checked for evidence of artifacts and ecofacts Similarly a swale running east roughly 87 meters from Pacific Avenue to meet the first swale at the northern extension of the southbound swale channel was ' checked for artifacts and ecofacts In these efforts Dr Koerper encountered no prehistoric cultural materials A recently scraped area of the swale abutting Canyon Drive had dirt that color graded ' to 10YR 5/3 (brown) an observation consistent with its cultural sterility Locally it is usually the case that village sites with their elevated levels of organics will exhibit darker Munsell readings than surrounding off-site soils ' RECOMMENDATIONS ' Since no cultural materials were unearthed during trenching for the Fairview Park sewer pipeline no recommendation pertaining to Project CMSD #160 are warranted The City of Costa Mesa Public ' Services/Engineering Division is to be applauded for its cautious approach to protecting cultural resources at Fairview Park It is highly unlikely that the present grassed picnic area of ' Fairview Park contains significant cultural remains but given the great significance of Ora-58 it should be a requirement that in the event of any future trenching of the present grassy area a ' County certified archaeologist should be retained to oversee monitoring of any impacted areas ' 10 1 REFERENCES CITED ' Anonymous 1937a Daily Notes on Banning Excavation and Osteological ' Report August 17 1936-April 14 1937 WPA Anthropological Project #4465 Typed Manuscript on file at UCI Library Special Collections ' 1937b Daily Notes for the Banning Site November 17 1937-December 17 or 20 1037 WPA Anthropological Project #7680 (Bound with Anon 1937a) Typed Manuscript on file at UCI Library Special ' 1938a Collections Daily Notes for Banning Site WPA Anthropological Project #7680 December 21 1937-February 10 1938 ' Typed Manuscript on file at UCI Library Special Collections 1938b Report of the Excavation of the Griset Site WPA ' Anthropological Project #7680 January 21 March 1938 Typed Manuscript on file at UCI Library Special Collections ' Bean John Lowell 1978 Cahuilla In Handbook of North American Indians Vol 8 California pp 575-587 Washington D C ' Smithsonian Institution Bean John Lowell and Florence C Shipek 1978 Luiseno In Handbook of North American Indians ' Vol 8 California pp 550-563 Washington D C Smithsonian Institution ' Bean John Lowell and Charles R Smith 1978a Gabrielino In Handbook of North American Indians Vol 8 California pp 538-549 Washington D C Smithsonian Institution 1978b Serrano In Handbook of North American Indians Vol 8 California pp 570-574 Washington D C Smithsonian Institution 1 Boscana Geronimo 1978 Chinigchinich A Revised and Annotated Version of ' Alfred Robinson s Translation of Father Geronimo Boscana s Historical Account of the Belief Usages Customs and Extravagancies of the Indians of this ' Mission of San Juan Capistrano called the Acagchemem Tribe Banning California Malki Museum Press Bright William ' 1975 Two Notes on Takic Classification Paper Read at the Third Annual Friends of Uto-Aztecan Conference Flagstaff June 19-20 1975 Copy Manuscript No ' 11 I ' 76-66 in National Anthropological Archives Smithsonian Institution Washington D C I Chace Paul 1969 Biological Archaeology of Some Coastal Middens I Orange County California Pacific Coast Archaeological Society Quarterly 5 (2) 64-77 I Colton Roger H and Jon M Erlandson 1991 Perspectives on Early Hunter-Gatherers of the California Coast In Hunter-Gatherers of Early Holocene Coastal California Jon Erlandson and Roger I Colton eds pp 133-139 Perspectives in California Archaeology Vol 1 Institute of Archaeology University of California Los Angeles IEarle David D and Steven 0 Neil 1994 An Ethnohistoric Analysis of Populations Settlement and Social Organization in Coastal I Orange County at the End of the Late Prehistoric Period The Keith Companies Costa Mesa I Erlandson Jon M 1988 Of Millingstones and Molluscs The Cultural Ecology of Early Holocene Hunter Gatherers of the California I Coast Ph D dissertation Department of Anthropology University of California Santa Barbara 1997 The Middle Holocene Along the California Coast 1 In Archaeology of the California Coast During the Middle Holocene edited by J M Erlandson and M A Glassow 1-10 Perspectives in California IArchaeology Vol 4 Los Angeles UCLA Institute I for Archaeology Erlandson Jon M and Roger H Colton 1991 An Archaeological Context for Early Holocene Studies on the California Coast In Hunters Gatherers of Early Holocene Coastal California J Erlandson and I R Colton eds pp 1-10 Perspectives in California Archaeology Vol I Institute of Archaeology University of California Los Angeles IErlandson J E and M L Moss 1994 Cultures and Environmental of the Pacific Coast of North America from 11 500 to 8 000 Years Ago draft I Paper presented at the Society for American Archaeology Meetings Anaheim California I Ezell Paul H 1977 New Information on San Dieguito III Technology Journal of California Anthropology 4 (2) 306 308 I 12 I ' 1983 A New Look at the San Dieguito Culture Casual Papers 1 (3) 103-109 San Diego Cultural Resource I Management Center San Diego State University Gallegos Dennis ed I 1987 San Dieguito-La Jolla Chronology and Controversy San Diego County Archaeological Society Research Paper 1 San Diego IGibson R 0 1992 An Introduction to the Study of Aboriginal Beads from California Pacific Coast Archaeological ISociety Quarterly 28 (3) 1-45 Gibson R 0 and C D King I 1992 Analysis of Beads Ornaments and Fishhooks from 25 Orange County Sites Appendix B in Newport Coast Archaeological Project Newport Coast Settlement I Systems Analysis and Discussion Vol II The Keith Companies Costa Mesa Report on file at the South Central Coastal Archaeological Information Center Institute of Archaeology U C L A IHaynes C V D C Grey D E Daman and R Bennett 1967 Arizona Radiocarbon Dates VII Radiocarbon 9 1 14 IHeizer Robert F 1968 The Indians of Los Angeles County Hugo Reid s Letters of 1952 Southwest Museum Papers 21 Los IAngeles Johnston Bernice E I 1962 California s Gabrielino Indians (Frederick Webb Hodge Anniversary Publication Fund 8) Los Angeles Southwest Museum IKing Chester 1981 The Evolution of Chumash Society Ph D dissertation Department of Anthropology I University of California Davis 1990 Evolution of Chumash Society New York Garland Publishing IKoerper Henry C 1981 Prehistoric Subsistence and Settlement in the I Newport Bay Area and Environs Orange County California Ph D dissertation University of California Riverside 1993 Report on Investigations to Delineate Site I Boundaries and Further Characterize Cultural Remains at CA-Ora 58 Costa Mesa California Cultural Resource Management Document prepared for the I 13 I I ' Department of Community Services City of Costa Mesa IKoerper Henry C and Christopher E Drover 1983 Chronology Building for Coastal Orange County The I Case from CA-Ora-119-A Pacific Coast Archaeological Society Quarterly 19 (2) 1-34 1984 Horizon and Tradition on the Southern California Coast A Rejoinder The Journal of California and I Great Basin Anthropology 6 (2) 269-272 Koerper Henry C David E Earle Roger D Mason and Paul Apodaca I 1996 Archaeological Ethnohistoric and Historic Notes Regarding ORA-58 and Other Sites Along the Lower Santa Ana River Drainage Costa Mesa Pacific Coast IArchaeological Society Quarterly 32 (1) 1-36 Koerper Henry C and Ken Hedges 1996 Patayan Anthropomorphic Figurine from an Orange I County Site Journal of California and Great Basin Anthropology 18 (2) 204-220 I Koerper Henry C Paul E Langenwalter II and Adella B Schroth 1991 Early Holocene Adaptations and the Transition Phase Problem Evidence from the Allen 0 Kelly Site Agua I Hedionda Lagoon In Early Holocene Hunters- Gatherers of the California Coast Origins Adaptations and Paleogeography J M Erlandson and R Colton editors Perspectives in California IArchaeology Vol I UCLA Institute of Archaeology Koerper Henry C Roger D Mason and Mark L Peterson I n d Demographic Dynamics in Late Holocene Orange County In Cultural Complexity on the California Coast Late Holocene Archaeological and Environmental Records J M Erlandson and T L Jones editors I Perspectives in California Archaeology UCLA Institute of Archaeology Under review I Kroeber A L 1925 Handbook of the Indians of California Bureau of American Ethnology Bulletin 78 Washington D C IMason Roger D and Mark L Peterson 1994 Newport Coast Archaeological Project Newport Coast Settlement Systems Analysis and Discussion MS on I file at the South Central Coastal Information Center UCLA Institute of Archaeology I McCawley William 1996 The First Angelinos The Gabrielino Indians of Los Angeles Banning Malki Museum Press and Novato I 14 Ballena Press Moratto Michael J 1984 California Archaeology New York Academic Press ' Rogers M J 1929 The Stone Art of the San Dieguito Plateau American Anthropologist 31 454-467 1939 Early Lithic Industries of the Lower Basin of the Colorado River and Adjacent Desert Areas San Diego Museum of Man Papers 3 ' Shipley William F 1978 Native Languages of California In Handbook of North American Indians Vol 8 California pp 80- 90 Washington D C Smithsonian Institution Sparkman Philip S ' 1908 The Culture of the Luiseflo Indians University of California Publications in American Archaeology and Ethnology 8 (4) 187-234 Berkeley ' Strong William Duncan 1929 Aboriginal Society in Southern California University of California Publications in American ' Archaeology and Ethnology 26 (1) 1-358 Berkeley True Delbert L 1958 An Early Complex in San Diego County California American Antiquity 23 (3) 255 263 Wallace William J ' 1955 A Suggested Chronology for Southern California Coastal Archaeology Southwestern Journal of Anthropology 11 214 230 ' Warren Claude N 1967 The San Dieguito Complex A Review and Hypothesis ' American Antiquity 32 168-185 1968 Cultural Tradition and Ecological Adaptation on the Southern California Coast Eastern New Mexico University Contributions in Anthropology 1 (3) 1-15 ' 1984 Horizon and Tradition on the Southern California Coast A Comment The Journal of California and Great Basin Anthropology 6 (2) 266 268 ' White Raymond C 1963 Luiseno Social Organization University of California Publications in American Archaeology and ' Ethnology 48 (2) 91-94 Berkeley Winterbourne J W 15 ' 1968 Orange County California Historical Research Project Report of Banning Estate Excavation (Norris Property) Pacific Coast Archaeological Society Quarterly 4 (2) 10-17 1 1 1 ' 16