PCAS NEWSLETTER THE MONTHLY PUBLICATION OF THE PACIFIC COAST ARCHAEOLOGICAL SOCIETY

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PCAS NEWSLETTER THE MONTHLY PUBLICATION OF THE PACIFIC COAST ARCHAEOLOGICAL SOCIETY

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Pacific Coast Archaeological Society Quarterly

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PCAS NEWSLETTER THE MONTHLY PUBLICATION OF THE PACIFIC COAST ARCHAEOLOGICAL SOCIETY www.pcas.org Volume 55 Numbers 10 ISSN 0270-6776 OCTOBER 2016 OCTOBER PCAS SPEAKERS Cindi Moar Alvitre, Desireé Reneé Martinez, and Dr. Wendy Teeter A Donation to the Museum (documentary film) PCAS MEETINGS CALENDAR GENERAL MEETING Free and Open To the Public October 13-7:30 pm Speakers: Cindi Moar Alvitre, Desireé Reneé Martinez, and Dr. Wendy Teeter Topic: A Donation to the Museum Location: IRWD Community Room 15500 Sand Canyon Ave., Irvine A Donation to the Museum (2016) is a documentary short that explores the background of one such case where Native Californian ancestral remains and possible funerary objects from two of the Channel Islands were collected by a relic hunter and donated to an English museum nearly a century ago. Made in cooperation with the Bristol Museum and Galleries, the donor's descendants, Tongva descendants, and staff from various California institutions, this film explores the background of the donation, its current condition, and the importance of the ancestral remains and items to the Tongva community. After (Continued on p. 3) DINNER WITH THE SPEAKER BOARD MEETING All Members Welcome October 8-12 noon Location: PCAS Curation Facility Contact Scott Findlay for directions: INSIDE THIS ISSUE 2 September Speaker Notes 2 October Curation Workday 3 Archaeology Month Poster 4 PCAS Annual Meeting and Election 4 September Board Meeting Summary 5 An Interesting Cabinet Card Photograph 6 Dig This Exhibits, Lectures, and more 7 Rock Art 2016 7 Speaker Schedule October is Archaeology Month. Bring a friend to the meeting!

SEPTEMBER SPEAKER NOTES The Archaeology of Interior Landscapes on the Channel Islands By Rene Brace Dr. Jennifer E. Perry concentrated on Santa Cruz Island s interior archaeology and the interior s relationship to the island s coastal sites over time. Most researchers have emphasized the island s perceived terrestrial limitations and have concentrated on coastal contexts because of the abundance of marine resources, rich time-depth of coastal middens, and lack of land mammals. Santa Cruz s Central Valley is a true island interior with reliable freshwater, important plant resources (acorns, lemonade berries, corms, and bulbs), and a more favorable microclimate than the coast. In addition, the island s east end contains El Montañon, an interior area. Of the 42 interior sites in the study, 17 have been excavated. The faunal assemblages for the interior sites are in contrast to the coastal sites in that shell middens are less dense and more shallow. There is lower faunal diversity, but with an emphasis on shellfish and with sea mammals (including high-status large marine mammals). Fish and bird bone are also present. Interior site artifacts include chert and volcanic stone tools, ground stone (digging stick weights, manos, metates, bowl mortars, and pestles), and beads. Chert quarries were found on the eastern end of the island. There are two major time periods for the interior sites 5,000 to 1,000 BC and AD 500 to historic times. The chronology gap between 1000 BC and AD 500 is represented by only four sites. Only two sites overlap the two time periods one in the Central Valley. The Middle Holocene sites have a pattern of seasonal residential bases on ridgetops, while the Late Holocene pattern reflects logistical forays to chert quarries and freshwater sources and use of rockshelters. Varied hypotheses regarding the interior occupation involve issues of access to freshwater sources, utilization of stone tool material (east end), utilization of plants, stopovers during land-based travel, defense (rockshelters), and aggregation at a central loci in the Central Valley. September speaker, Dr. Jennifer E. Perry, with PCAS Programs Co-Chair Joe Hodulik. Excavations at seven Central Valley sites indicate occupation from 6,000 BP to Spanish contact. The Central Valley may have served as a gathering place for economically independent social units. When: Where: PREHISTORIC OC 2016 October 8, 2016, 1 pm Red Car Building prehistory. Saturday, October 15, 2015 10:00 am 3:00 pm Ralph B. Clark Regional Park, Buena Park PCAS will have activity and display tables at the Cooper Center s Prehistoric OC, an annual family festival celebrating archaeology and paleontology. If you can volunteer for a few hours, please contact Megan Galway at 714-539-6354 or membership@pcas.org. you will be coming. 2

October Speakers (continued from p. 1) the film, Cindi Moar Alvitre is a mother, grandmother, educator, and artist activist. A descendant of the original inhabitants of Los Angeles basin and southern Channel Islands, she served as the first woman chair of the Gabrieleno/Tongva Tribal Council and co-founded the Ti'at Society for the renewal of the ancient maritime practices of the coastal/island Tongva. Ms. Alvitre is a professor and the NAGPRA coordinator at California State University, Long Beach. Cindi Moar Alvitre. Dr. Wendy Teeter. OCTOBER IS ARCHAEOLOGY MONTH Inc. Desireé Reneé Martinez. The 2016 Archaeoloby Month poster was designed by David Nicholson. 3

PCAS Annual Meeting and Election JUNE BOARD MEETING SUMMARY Vice-President Scott Findlay called the meeting to order at 12:08 PM at the Red Car Building. PCAS Board Members present: Scott Findlay, Rene Brace, Jane Gothhold (on speaker phone), Joe Hodulik (on speaker phone), Hank Koerper, Kathleen Shada, and Steve Dwyer. PCAS members present: Bob Brace. The June minutes were approved with correction, and the September Treasurer s report was accepted. Scott Findlay reported that relocation from the Old Courthouse to the Red Car Building and the Cooper Center is complete. A lease agreement for space at the Cooper Center was signed. Joe Hodulik has agreed to investigate a new speaker system for lectures. Hank Koerper reported that Dinner with the Speaker prior to the General Meeting ended at the appropriate time and that restaurant employees recognized the need for timely service. The Nomination Committee reported that Bob Brace, Megan Galway, and Brian Steffensen have agreed to stand for election to the Board. Joe Hodulik has submitted room reservation requests to the IRWD and is waiting for notification. The Board agreed to change the October Board meeting and Curation Workday to October 8 because of conflict with Prehistoric OC, which is scheduled for October 15. The September donation to the PCAS Scholarship fund from Joe Hodulik s activity was $254!! Steve Dwyer announced a field trip for September 23 25 to an area north of China Lake. PCAS will have a table at the Rock Art Symposium on November 5. The meeting was adjourned at 12:59 pm. 4

An Interesting Cabinet Card Photograph Henry C. Koerper End Notes 1. Houseworth arrived in California seeking his fortune as a true forty-niner, but after a two-year effort in futility, he became a partner in a San Francisco optician business (Lawrence & Houseworth). Beyond lenses and frames, he and George Lawrence sold camera lenses and in time stereoscopic cards, activities that eventually led to production of their own Western photography and marketing of their own stereo landscape views. When Lawrence retired in 1868, Houseworth became sole proprietor of the photographic and optical business, eventually opening the Art Parlor to continue celebrity photoportraiture; in the late 1880s he turned his attentions almost solely to optical work (http://broadway/ cas.sc.edu/content/thomas-houseworth, accessed 5/2/2016). 2. See Lewis and Clark (1902, 2:150). References Cited French, David H., and Kathrine S. French 1998 Wasco, Wishram, and Cascades. In Plateau, edited by Deward E. Walker, Jr., pp. 360 377. Handbook of North American Indians, Vol. 12, William C. Sturtevant, general editor, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C. Lewis, Meriwether, and William Clark 1902 History of the Expedition Under the Command of Captains Lewis and Clark, 1804-5-6. 2 Vols. A. C. McClurg, Chicago. Stern, Theodore 1998 Columbia River Trade Network. In Plateau, edited by Deward E. Walker, Jr., pp. 641 652. Handbook of North American Indians, Vol. 12, William C. Sturtevant, general editor, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C. 5

DIG THIS... Exhibits Classes, Meetings, and Events The Virgin of Guadalupe: Images in Colonial Mexico. Bowers Museum, October 8 January 29, 2017. Fee varies. Information: www.bowers.org. Lectures 6 The Archaeology of Joshua Tree National Park Past, Present, and Future, by Michael Newland (Sonoma State University). Hi-Desert Nature Museum, Yucca Valley, September 30, 7 pm. Free. Information: http://hidesertnaturemuseum.org. Opening Weekend Lecture: The Jewel of the Americas, by Alejandra Mayela Flores Enríquez, October 9; Our Lady of Guadalupe: Patron of Mexico, by Jacqueline Hahn, October 22. Both lectures at Bowers Museum, 1:30 pm. Fee: members or paid admission $9, general $12. Information: www.bowers.org. The Ghost Trails of Three Rivers, by Lawrence R. Baca. A San Diego Rock Art Association lecture, Kumeyaay-Ipai Interpretive Center, Poway, October 9. Potluck 4 pm; presentations 5 pm. Fee: Donation $5; members free. Information: www.sandiegorockart.org. Mahasna Revisited, by Dr. David Anderson, (University of Wisconsin, La Crosse), a joint AIA, OC chapter, and ARCE lecture. Bowers Museum, October 15, 1:30 pm. Free. Information: www.bowers.org or 714-567-3600. New Mexico From Archaeological Treasures to Historic Legacies, by Maria Puente and Britt Wilson. A Coachella Valley Archaeological Society lecture, Portola Community Center, 45-480 Portola Ave., Palm Desert, October 20, 6:30 pm. Free. Information: www.cvarch.org. Archaeology Month Double Header Lectures, by Dr. Mustafa Waziri (General Director of Antiquities in Luxor) and Salah El Masekh (Chief Inspector of excavations at Karnak). Bowers Museum, October 23, 2 4 pm. Fee: $50. Information: www.bowers.org. History of Witches Lore, by Karen Lacy and Sandra Pentney. San Diego County Archaeological Society, Los Peñasquitos Ranch House, October 25, 7:30 pm. Free. Information: www.sandiegoarchaeologicalsociety.com. Prehistoric OC, sponsored by the Cooper Center and OC Parks, Ralph B. Clark Regional Park, 8800 Roscrans Ave, Buena Park, October 15, 10 am 3 pm. Free (parking fee). Information: www.prehistoricoc.org. Malki Museum s Fall Gathering will have Native food displays and tasting, Cahuilla Bird Singers and Bird Dancers, basket weaving demonstrations, etc. Malki Museum, 11759 Malki Road, Banning, October 15, 10 am 4 pm. Free; lunch with suggested donation of $10. Information: www.malkimuseum.org. A Tour of the Museum Collections at Joshua Tree National Park. Oasis of Mara Visitor s Center, Twentynine Palms, October 15, 22, and 29,1 and 3 pm. Limited to 8 per tour. Free. Reservations required: Mary Oster at 760-367-5558, mary_oster@nps.gov. California Indian Conference Creations and Constructions: Indigenizing the Future of California Indian Country, San Diego State University, October 20 22. Information: https://sites.google.com/a/ mail.sdsu.edu/cic/home. Rock Art 2016, sponsored by the San Diego Rock Art Association, will be held at the San Diego Community College District Educational Cultural Complex Theatre, 4343 Ocean View Blvd, Room 159, San Diego, November 5, 9 am 4:30 pm. Fee: $25. Information and online registration: www.sandiegorockart.org. Visit www.pcas.org for all the latest news.

PCAS CODE OF ETHICS The Pacific Coast Archaeological Society (PCAS) is a nonprofit group of professional and avocational people dedicated to proper management of our cultural resources, public education, and the protection and preservation of archaeological materials and collections. The following principles have been adopted by the PCAS: 1. Professional methods and forms will be used on all archaeological field surveys, excavations, and laboratory sessions. 2. A complete record of field and laboratory work will be filed with the PCAS Curator and stored at a facility approved by the Society s Board of Directors. 3. No archaeological materials will be removed without proper permits, landowner permission, and a field research design. 4. Unless otherwise legally stipulated before activity commences, all materials collected will be deposited for further research with the Curator at a facility approved by the Society's Board of Directors. 5. All generated reports will be the property of the Society and distributed as deemed appropriate. 6. All Society field activities will be performed only under the direction of a qualified field archaeologist (Principal Investigator) and the supervision of field or site directors. 7. The above principles will be observed on both Society approved projects and projects performed under the direction of an authorized institution or organization. 8. The Society and its members will strive to educate the public of the importance and proper management of our non-renewable cultural resources and to discourage the collection and commercial exploitation of archaeological materials. 9. PCAS members shall not benefit from the acquisition, purchase, sale, or trade of archaeological artifacts, materials, or specimens. 10. All members shall adhere to City, County, State, and Federal antiquities laws. Join PCAS Members at Rock Art 2016 PCAS SPEAKER CALENDAR Rock Art 2016, sponsored by the San Diego Rock Art Association, will be held on November 5 at the spacious San Diego Community College District Educational Cultural Complex Theatre with free parking. PCAS will have an information and Quarterly sales table. Information and online registration: www.sandiegorockart.org. 7

2016 PCAS BOARD MEMBERS AND COMMITTEE CONTACTS Office Name Email Phone *President Sherri Gust president@pcas.org 714-245-0264 *Vice-President Scott Findlay vicepresident@pcas.org 714-342-2534 *Secretary Gail Cochlin secretary@pcas.org 714-745-0815 *Treasurer Rene Brace treasurer@pcas.org 714-544-6282 *Field Trips Co-Chair Stephen Dwyer fieldtrips@pacas.org 714-969-1911 *Historian/Librarian/Archivist Jane Gothold librarian-archivist@pcas.org 562-947-6506 *Programs Co-Chair Joe Hodulik programs@pcas.org 949-300-1864 *Quarterly Editor Hank Koerper publications@pcas.org 714-633-9287 *Voting member Kathleen Shada kathleenshada@pcas.org 714-381-8182 Curator Mark Roeder curator@pcas.org 714-299-4150 Donation-Awards Coordinator Joe Hodulik donation-awards@pcas.org 949-300-1864 Field Trips Scott Findlay fieldtrips@pcas.org 714-342-2534 Membership Megan Galway membership@pcas.org 714-539-6354 Native American Liaison Steve O Neil nativeamericanliaison@pcas.org 949-677-2391 Newsletter Editor Sherri Gust newsletter@pcas.org 714-245-0264 Programs Co-Chair Brian Steffensen programs@pcas.org 714-348-9179 Publicist Joe Hodulik publicity@pcas.org 949-300-1864 Refreshments Gail Cochlin refreshments@pcas.org 714-745-0815 Scholarship Megan Galway scholarship@pcas.org 714-539-6354 Website Rene Brace info@pcas.org 714-544-6282 *PCAS Board Member PACIFIC COAST ARCHAEOLOGICAL SOCIETY 2016 Calendar Year Membership and Subscription Form Name(s): Address: City: State: Zip Code Phone: Email: Newsletters will be sent by email unless a mailed copy is requested. Signature Membership (Includes Quarterly/Newsletter) Subscription Only Scholarship Fund Active Member - $45 Quarterly - $40 Donation $ Family Membership - $50 Newsletter - $20 Supporting Member* - $55 Donor Member* - $75 Lifetime Member* - $1000 * May be individual or family membership Student Associate - $10 (email Newsletter only) www.pcas.org Return form with payment to PCAS Membership PO Box 10926 Costa Mesa, CA 92627-0926