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SOCIETY FOR CALIFORNIA ARCHAEOLOGY
NEWSLETTER VOLUME 15 NUMBER1 FEBRUARY 1981
SCA 1981 OFFICER NOMINEES LISTED Ballots for the 1981 SCA elections will
be mailed to all members by March 2 1981 by first-class mail Return ballots post marked no later than March 30, to be received in the Business Office no later than April 2 Biographies of candidates and a membership renewal notice ·will be sent with the ballots
Note that dues are parable ~ow for 1981 -dues will need to be paid at the time the
ballot is returned (or before) in order to have your vote counted.
If your ballot does not arrive fairly soon after March 2nd let Business Manager Gale Carpenter know, at the SCA Business Office, c/o Dept of Anthropology, Calif State University Fullerton, CA 92634
Candidates for election as announced by Keith Dixon Chairman of the Nominations Committee, are the following:
President-Elect: Gary S Breschini Christopher Corson Marie G Cottrell
Northern Vice President: Michael Boynton Bob Cartier Gerald R. Gates
Southern Vice-President: Charles Bull Mark Q. Sutton
Treasurer: (2-year term): Jane Gothold
Secretary:
M Jay Hatley Lonta C Pierce Jan Townsend
William T Eckhardt Maryanne Fazio Jan Whitlow
There will be a space for ,-,rite-ins for each office Be sure to return your ballo1: in the envelope provided with your ballot
ANNUP.L "1EETINGS IN BAKERSFIELD The SCA Annual Meeting in Bakersfield is
takini shap€ Abstracts on projects from all over the state covering numerous archaeological topics have been received. All sigr1s point to an interesting and successful meeting In addition, several publishers have expressed an interest in setting up publication displays
Some of the sessions organized so far include papers on Geoglyphics (intaglio) "Coso Style" rock art historic archaeology, Native American graphics artifact analysis data recovery methods and a panel presentation by the Native American Heritage Commission Also on the program will be several interesting slide/tape presentations a photo display of rock art an educational session for students on the archaeological regions of California, and workshops on flintknapping and field photography
Some of the titles of papers include these: "The Chew Kee Store in Fiddletown California"; "A Typology of Basque Aspen Carvings in the Northern Sierra, Nevada"; "Rock Art: American Graffiti"; "Newberry Cave: an Elko Magico Religious Site in San Bernardino County"; "Trail of the Mind: Archaeology on the El Dorado"; "The Calico Early Man Site"; "A Late Prehistoric Ritualistic Time Marker for the Mojave River Valley"; "Examples of Mojave Desert Rock Alignments"; "A Comparison of Two Flotation Methods"; and "Pictographs of the Ghost Dance Movements of 1870 and 1890"
So make your plans now to attend the 1981 Annual Meetings See the enclosed information. For further information contact
or
ROBERT A. SCHIFFMAN Program Chairman Bakersfield College 1801 Panorama Drive Bakersfield, CA 93305 (805) 395-4391
ERIC MONTIZAMRERT, Facilities and Arrangements Chairman
Bureau of Land Management
Next News Deadline APRIL 20 800 Truxton Ave , Room 311 Bakersfield, CA 93301 (805) 861-4191
· DEADLINE EXTENDED FOR ABSTRAOS ---
The ~eadline for submitting abstracts for the 1981 Annual Meeting has been extended to March 10, 1981. When submitting an abstract make sure to include your address affiliation and audiovisual equipment needed. Presentations can be based on a forma l paper or can be given informally based on current research where no paper has been written Keep in mind that unless you request it when you s ubmit your abstract your presentation will be limited to 20 minutes For additional information or for s ubmitting abstracts, contact:
BOB SCHIFFMAN Program Chmn. Bakersfield (allege 1801 Panorama Drive Bakersfield, CA 93305 (805) 395 4391
ARCHAEOLOGICAL INSTITUTE SUMMARIES AVAILABLE The Archaeological Institute of America
San Diego Chapter, plans to pr:.nt summaries of the papers given at its Feb 14 1981 symposium, "Archaeology of San Diego and Southern California, with Emphasis on Conservation Mitigation and Education," and will have these available to anyone who would like to order them in ad vane.,, It is expected that the summaries will (with reference material) total about 25 pages and costs will be kept as low as possible
Speakers included Emma Lous Davis Paul Chace Ken Hedges, Richard Carrico, Fern Southcott Russell Kaldenberg Daniel Whitney, and Larry Leach (moderator) If you woulcl li]~e to obtain copies please write a note to the San Diego Chapter of A.I.A. , P. O. Box 3343, La Jolla, CA 92038, Attention John Howe, or phone (714) 454-6582 or 7647 Please give name affiliation, address and number of copies desired. They would appreci;,---:e hearing from you before March 15 to help guide them in ordering the number of copies they will print.
KPBS-TV of San Diego State University has taped the program This film may be bor rowed f·,·c,m the station or copies may be purchased.
Calen_d~~ -..:. 31 ffi: .· d:· 'i , of [vents 1 , • -· - ~
March 19-21 Southwestern Anthropology Assn. Annual Mee t ing, Santa Barbara (Miramar Hotel) Write Nancy P Walter, 17048 Sunburst Northridge CA 91325
March 29-Apr 1 Sixth Annual California Historic Preservation Conference, Rivers ide (Theme: "Strengthening the Local Preservation Process")
April 9 11 Society for California Archaeology Annual Meeting Bakersfield (Bakersfield Inn) Seep 1 above
April 29-May 2 Society for American Archaeology Annual Meeting, ·San Diego (San Diego Convention Center)
--·-- --------------CO~MENT SOUGHT FOR BLM WILDERNESS POLI CY
Comments or suggestions on the Draft Wilderness Management Policy of the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) are sought from the public by Atril 1, 1981. This policy describes how t e BLM proposes to ·manage the lands it ad1r.inisters which are part of the National Wilderness Preservation System , and designated as wilderness by an Act of Congress The policy according to the Federal Register (Vol 46 No 11 Jan. 16 1981, pages 4456-44 79), closely parallels the existing wilderness management policy of the US Forest Service.
·~ .Archaeological and historical resources
are consistent with wilderness preservation concept and CRM objectives,"available for recreational scenic scientific, educational ~o~ervation, ancLhistorical uses (including ceremonial or religious use by Native Americans) "
Study or nanagement will not normally include any excavation, stabilization, or interp retation activities Salvage rehabilitation, stabilization, reconstruction and restoration work excavation and intensive inventories may be permitted on a case-by-case basis where it will not degrade the overall wilderness character of the area and where it is needed to p preserve the resource State Director approval wi ~ 1 be required.
Sitei or structures not qualified for the National Register nay be removed or obliterated unless they meet the "minimum tool" policy or ar e necessary for a permitted use Structures that do qualify for National Register nomination may be maintained, destroyed, or allowed to deteriorate naturally If such a decision is made, mitigation of adverse effects (such as drawing and photographing salvaging by removing or dismantling stabilizing, or restoring the resourc,~s) may be considered. If SHPO, Advisory Council and BLM agree upon data recovery as the appropria1:e mitigation action, they shall execute a Memorandum of Understanding specifying the steps to be taken to mitigate adverse effects.
Copies of the Draft Wilderness Management Polici are available from David E. Porter, Div of Wi derness and Environmental Areas (430) Bureau o:f Land Management 1800 C St NW Washington, DC 20240 or from the State Director Bureau of Land Management 2800 Cottage Way, Sacramento, CA 95825
Comments or suggestions should be sent to Director (430), Bureau of Land Management 1800 C St NW Washington DC 20240 by April 1
NEW BOOK ON CALIFORNIA DESERT PREHISTORY The Great Basin Foundation (Emma Lou Davis
Director) has published its new Evaluation of Earll Human Activities and Remains in the Cali ornia Desert, a "lively review of 40,000 years of California prehistory; stone technologies and geoarchaeology of representative sites Presents the first Master Chronology for these deserts". Of· its iL07 pages,60% is in pictures Available for S14 SO from Great Basin Foundation, 1-236 Concord St San Diego CA 92106
2
HEARINGS ON ARCHAEOLOGICAL ACT Hearings have been set by the
Department of the Interior for the Archaeological Resources Protection Act of 1979 In California the only public hearings wi 11 be on February 28, 1981 at the Federal Courthouse Room 2007 456 Golden Gate Avenue San Francisco from 10 a. m. to 4 p m. Later hearinys (also on Saturdays) will be in Anchorage, Alaska on March 7 and · Denver on March 14 Charles M McKinney Manaqer Federal Antiquities P·rogram, Heritage Conservation and Recreation · serv~ce is the prinicpal hearings office.r His office may be co ntacted for ·further ·information at (202) 343-5264
The hearings wiJ L conc.e.rn_~ Proposed _~ Uniform Rulemaking" in response to Section lO(a) of the Act which calls for uniform regulations to be written by the Secretaries of the Interior, Defense Agriculture and the Chairman of the Board of the Tennessee Valley Authority as may be appropriate to carry out the purposes of the Archaeoiogi cal Resources Protection Act of 1979 According to the Federal Register for Jan 19 1981, "This uniform rulemaking wil serve as the foundation and . basic policy standard for additional regulations which Departments and independent agencies may promulgate pursuant to Section lO(b) of the Act "
Written comments on the proposed rulemaking are invited and should be submitted by March 20, 1981, to the Director Heritage Conservation and Re Recreation Service, CODE: W512 Dept of the Interior 440 G St., N W , Washington [l.C. 20243, Comments should include the name and ad~ress of the person making the cubmission should identify the specific s~ction(s) and/or paragraphs commented on, should state reasons for the comments and where appropriate should suggest an a ternative approach
The Archaeologi cal Resources Protection Act of 1979 seeks to protect archaeological resources on public lands and Indian lands, and to increase communication and exchange of information among governmental authorities, archaeologists, Native Americans collectors and the general public with the aim of protecting and conserving archaeological resources Standards for the issuance of permits to be issued to qualified persons who wish to use archaeological resources in the public interest, and for penalty provisions for unauthorized use of these resources are a m~in focus of the uniform regulations which are to be discussed and commented upon
Further infor~ation , on tbe proposed rulemaking is available in the Federal Register, Vol 46, No 12 beginning on page 5566 (Jan 19 1981) Copies should be available in local libaries or county law libraries
Information from Federal Register, Vol 46 No 12 1/19/81
HISTORIC PRESERVATION BILL SIGNED President Carter on December 12 1980
signed the National Historic Preservation Act Amendments of 1980 The bill reauthorizes $150 million annually for the Historic Preservation Fund According to ·pfitervation ·Niws for December 1980 the "Congress compromi~ed on an owner consent provision for the Nation a 1 Register of Historic Places after strong resistance from preservationists The bill had broad-based national support from the pr i vate-sector preservation movement, and that interest made passage of the bill possible during the busy lame - duck session of Congress
A New Yor.k Times article by Ben franklin (Dec 14, 1980) points out that the amendments
_ pack_a_ge ov_e.1:came a Federal -~o_urt qe_ci_sio11 __ of last August which threatened nat ion al historic landmark designations:
"The ame ndments signed yesterday validated the status of all 1,300 landmark designations made to date including the Green Springs region near Charlottesville Va , that were affected by the ruling The legislation also declares the 20,000 listings in the National Reg i s t e r of Hi s tori c P 1 aces to be val i d , removing any doubt about their status
"Property designated as a landmark cannot · be altered a l though its owner can withdraw it from landmark status "
The bi 11, sponsored by Rep John F Seiberling (D, Ohio) and Sen Dale L Bumpers (0 Ark), "requires more public notice of proposed historic designations It mandates greater public participation in, and more opportunity to object to individual declatations And it requires absolute owner consent, for the first time in final decisions on historical landmark designations
Under the new amendments th e Interior Department can continue to note the historic significance of pl aces whose owners decline the honorific des gnation
"Such action limits only Federal denigration of the sites--say by a highway development involving Federal funds It has no effect on an owner's private disposition of the property
"The bulk of the amendments accomplished what Robert R. Garvey Jr di rector of the Governments Advisory Council on Historic Preservation described in an interview as
a l egislative fine tuning of a program that has been conducted until now largely under regulations and executive orders '
"The measure also established a: new National Building Museum in Washington s 93-year-old Pension Building a designated historic landmark itself--with a leaky roof"
Information taken from repr i nts from Preservation News, 12 /80 and New York Times, 12/14/80, as published in SCAN, Santa Cruz Archaeological Notes, Vol 10 No 1 1/81 pages 1 and 11
3
POSITION OPEN The Archeological Study Center the
contracting arm of the Department of Anthropology at California State University Sacramento is currently accepting resumes for :he position of Research Director The ASC is engaged in a wide rar.ge of cultural resource management activities with various Federal, State and local a gen ci es as well as the private sectoi·. The position entails proposal and report writing, editing and the direction of staff Salary is derived through the generation of contracts An M.A. with experience in California archaeology is the minimum requirement Resumes may be sent to the Archeol ogi cal Study Center Department of Anthropology, 6000 J Street, Sacramento CA 95819 For further information call (916) 454-6070 - - . .
STEVE DONDERO 1/5/81
ARTI CLE:S SOUGHT FOR NEWSLETTER Ronald Douglas as Southern California
Regional Editor for the SC,'; Newsletter, is soliciting short news briefs or research arti c les on Southern California archaeology and related subjects Regional participation in the SCA Newsletter he feels "can provide a a forum for di"scussion on archaeological issues as well as provide an opportunity for sharing information on current research
"I would like to invite you, on behalf of the entire SCA Newsletter editorial staff to submit articles on Southern California Archaeology for publication in the SCA Newsletter If you wish to participate please send your articles to me at the following address:
RONALD D DOUGLAS 1/26 / 81 Larry Seeman Associates Inc 500 Newport Center Drive Suite 525 Newport Beach CA 92660
SECOND VERNAL POOL SYMPOSIUM The .Second Vernal Pool Symposium will be
held on May 9 and 10 1981 at the University of California Davis The symposium will provide an opportunity for discussing the or1g1n physiography, and the plant and ~nimal communities of vernal pools (temporary ponds 1 akes or streams) and their biogeography evolution eco ogy and conservation The program includes much greater d·iversity of topics than the first symposium held in 1976 and it is hoped that it will stimulate even greater interest in the related scientific and conservation acti'liti es
Registration is encouraged prior to Ma l' Ch 1 The registration fee of $10 {payable to the Institute of Ecology) will include a copy of the proceedings of the symposium when they are published Send inquiries registration fee, and abs t racts of a s hort report if you wis h to pre sent one to the Secretary Second ve·rnal Pool Symposium, Institute of Ecology Univ of California Davis CA 95616
4
WIDESTEM POINT STUDY In September 1980 Jamie Roscoe Larry
Weigel and Greg White of Sonoma State University began a grant~funded study of the Borax Lake Widestem an early North Coast Ranges projEecti e point The objectives of our study are to identify the extent of morphological variation within the points usually referred to as "widestem" and to review temporal, spatial environmental and cultural contexts to assist in understanding sample variability
The methods of our study included drawing together regional and extra-regional widestem data including those drawn from both published and unpublished literature We are collecting metrical information, drawings and photographs and are also conducting a replication study to simulate the manufacturing techniques as well as the types of wear and fracture 6bserved in our sample
To date we have taken several data-gathering trips including i major foray north to Oregon, · consulting with many individuals and institu ti ons along the way Metrical data were collected on attributes as adapted from Thomas Great Basin key We now have data on file for more than 130 specimens, and have constructed a tentative classification based upon the monothetic subdivisive taxonomic system This system allows the objective replication of intuitively based classes and results in a binary dendrogram with . fewest possible decisions for identification of observed classes
We are presently struggling with concepts and application of theories of stylistic behavior and information exchange The carrying out of these concepts th rough techniques of cla~sification is our aim.
Requests for information have been made of many researchers, as wel 1 as requests to view collections and conduct obsidian studies Those not reached individually can contribute to the study by writing or calling in information or constructive commentary ·
The study is to be completed in June 1981
GREG WHITE Sonoma State University 1801 East Cotati Ave Rohnert Park, CA 94928 ( 707) 664-2381
CALICO DATING AND LACK OF FUNDING According to the PCAS Newsletter (Vol 20,
No 1 1/81, page 1) the Calico site has been dated at 200,000 years ago by James Bischoff USGS geologist Menlo Park using the uraniumthorium dating method
Archaeologist Ruth Simpson of the San Bernardino County Museum has directed work on the site since 1964 The Bureau of Land Management which has been funding the work on the site, does not plan to continue funding for work after March 1st. To urge continued funding of the project, write or call Jim Ruch, State Director, Bureau of Land Management Sacramento
RECORD .SEARCH NEEDED FOR ElRS Recently a problem has arisen concerning
archaeological records searches for Environmental Impact Reports (EIRs) In the past there has been a question about the acceptability of private archaeological consulting firms conducting EIR-related archaeological record searches "in-house " through files and records maintained outside the Regional Office of the State Archaeo logical Survey jurisdiction In a recent comment on this topic the California State Historic Preservation Officer, Dr. Knox Mellon stated that it is that offices position that an archaeologica l records search is not complete without checking the Regional Office records Dr. Mellon went on to say that since the Regional Office .is that official state repository cf site records and reports their records are the legal basis for known site information. Furthermore even if, another institution has a tota l ly accurate duplicate set of the Regional Offices records these records would probably already be at least a couple of weeks out of date
Because an archaeological records search is in most cases a legal requirement for EIRs subject to the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA) review by SHPO, a danger exists that such a document might not pass CEQA review because of an unacceptable records search This could cause time -consuming and expensive problems for the client as well as the archaeological cons u 1 tan t.
RONALD DOUGLAS 1/23/81
GALE CARPENTER IS NEW SCA BUSINESS MANAGER Gale Carpenter has assumed the duties
of SCA Business Office Manger, replacing Susan Chapman Gale is a first-year graduate student majoring in archaeology She is particularly interested in faunal analysis and historic archaeology
Last .summer Ga l e worked as an archaologist in the Kings River District of the Sierra National Forest Her business experience includes working. for a large insurance firm as control l er for the seven southern California counties
Besides collecting and preparing specimens for the CSUF Museum faunal collection Gale is presently analyzing historic material from the Newland House (Ora-183) and the rockshelter at Soda Lake (SBr-363)
Gale may be reached through the Anthropology Department at California State University Fullerton, CA 92634 (714) 773-3626, or through the CSUF Museum of Anthropology at the same address, (714) 773-3976 or 3977
CONSTANCE CAMERON . 2/2/81 Cu~ator, ·Museum of Anthropo l ogy Department of Anthropology · California State University Fullerton CA 92634
5
SCA MEt,1.BERSHIP POSTERS BEING DISTRIBL'TED A new SCA membership poster with attached
membership forms similar to one distributed a few years ago. is now being made available again The attractive poster is designed for permanent display and gives basic jnformation about the Society for California Archaeology The Membership Committee has already sent the posters to a number of colleges, universities avocation a1 societies, museums offices and labs where potential SCA members might be found Please post them if your institution has received a copy and urge everyone to join
If your institution has not yet received the poster with membership forms attached, please feel welcome to request one from the SCA Business Office :
CONNIE CAMERON GALE CARPENTER Society for California Archaeology Business Off ice c/o Department of Anthropology California State University Fullerton CA 92634 ( 714) 773-39 77
QUARTERLY REVIEW OF ARCHAEOLOGY A new publication, the Quarterly Review of
Archaeology. has begun publication with a December 1980 issue, Vol I It will appear 4 times per year (March June September and December) for an annual subscriptionpprice of $8.00 All correspondence should be addressed to the Editor P O Box 634 Williamstown, MA 01267 Editor-in-Chief is Frederick Hadleigh West and the contributing editors include many well known archaeologists--for example George Frison (Great Plains), Dena Dincauze (Northeast US ) David Kelley (Eastern Mesoamerica) Paul Tolstoy (Western Mesoamerica) Denise de Sonneville Bordes (Upper Palaeol thic)--but none are given for Southwestern or Pacific Coast regions of the U.S Various topical editors are also listed
'· Th following brief description is given:
"The Quarterly Review of Archaeology has as its only purpose the cr~tical evaluation of the many kinds of records that affec t the conduct of archaeology and the interpretation of prehistory As a journal devoted to the review of archaeological literature, its basic commitment is to the profession The orientation is dominantly Americanist but coverage of other regions beyond the Americas wi 11 it is hoped ser•,e readers whose primary intere~ts lie else~here
"The selection of material for review is the responsibility of the contributing editors In gene ral, these wi 11 be drawn from the usual categories i n which are found the great part of archaeologicn1 pub l ication: si te reports articles monographs, and theses--in their various levels of formality Poplar presentations on archaeology may occasional .y be reviewed Older publications as wel 1 as those of recent issue wi 11 be considered "
Report from tf.e oe,ert By RUSSFLL L KALDENBERG Desert Edi tor
Long-time desert archaeologist Jay von Werlhof is recovering very well from an unexpected quadruple heart by-pass operation on December 31 1980 Jay has improved so much that he was back in the Imperial County desert surveying with his classes by lhe middle of January A number of archaeologists donated blood in his name at loc ll.J blood banks Paul Ezell (San Di~gq ?~~te) and Richard Carrico (WESTEC) assumed Jay's classes for the final 3 weeks of the semester allowing Jay to recuperate We all wish Jay a complete and speedy rec,we ry
Now that the Desert Plan has been signed by former Secretary of Interior Cecil Andrus the task of implementation is under way. Several small contracts have been issued .for the current fiscal year which will assist in beginning the 20-year plan to preserve some of our desert heritage ART Maps received a small contract to map the petroglyphs and associated rock rings, midden, etc. at Deep Tank in the Rodman Mountains near Barstow Heritage Research Associates was awarded a contract to map the rock art elements at Corn Spring in Riverside County Cornerstone Research is conducting two small excavations near Barstow in support of the Off Road Vehicle program Archaeological Systems Management was awarded a contract to map the historic townsit.e of Panamint C}ty and to prepare a photogrammetnc nta;i o Emma Lou Davis Panamin t Val ley Rock Alignments. In Last Chance Canyon, c'ar :,estern Anthropological Reaear ch is ana analyzing the resul ts of a test excavation on two occupation sites which date to about 800 A.D Results from these projects will be summarized in a forthcoming report
With the disbanding of the Desert Plan Staff there has been a reorganization within ~BLM Eric Ritter was transferred to the Sacramento Office of t he Bureau of Land Management (BLM) to coordinate major power projects Bob Laidlaw has become the BLM s State Office Ethnographer Francis Be~ is the Clear Lake Area Office~aeologist; Don Lipp has been transferred to the USFS in Lee Vining; Richard Brook is the Eastern States Office Archaeo l ogist in Reston, Virginia, and Suzanne Crowley was t ransferred to Oregon The Ridgecrest Office no l9nger in the Bakersfield Dis t rict, is now i n the Desert District (old Riverside District) Russell Kaldenberg s posjtion of Desert District Archaeologist has been changed and he is now the district s Cultural Resource Program Manager (For those of you who remember back a few years to when Rick Hanks was Southern Vice-President of SCA , he went on to become the lead BLM archae ologi s t in Washington Rick has recently become an Area Manager in the Rio Puerco Resource Area near Albuquerque NM.
6
New Mexico Rick is the first archaeologist who has successfully moved from an archaeol ogical position directJy to become a line manager.) Helen Cloush, who e arlier ··moved from Bakersfield District Ar chaeologist to Chief of Resources in Bakersfield, recently t ook a mid-level planning job with the USFS in Fairbanks, Alaska.
Since I last reported , a number of important archaeologicaI inventories and a few excavations have been undertaken i n the California Desert. Most of these have been related to massive energy projects often beginning in other states and crossing into the L.A . Basin Others involve the military bases so prevalent throughout the desert. The bases are finally beginning to inventory their lands. Fort Irwin , north of Barstow, h as been selected as the Nat ional Army Training Center and is scheduled to open for full-scale maneuvers in July of this year. Recently a job announcement advertised for a base archaeologist at the GS-12 level Depending on the outcome of the recent hiring freeze put into effect by President Reagan's Executive Or der, Fort Irwin should have a base archaeologist by late spring I congratulate the Army for their foresight or fear whichever it may be
C William Clewlow Jr. (Ancient Enterprises) was contracted to perform an i nventory of the Cose Geothermal Study Area near Ridgecrest in southwestern Inyo County The report entitled "Cultural Resources Technical Report on the Caso Geothermal Study Area" involves a study of 72 ,6 40 square acres During the course of the field work 154 sites were identified and recorded. recorded. Of these sites 10 we re recorded as having more than one component Eight-two sites (55%) were recorded as lithic scatters and 7 sites were noted as being quarry sites. Obsidian is prolific in the area and presented the surveyors with a major obstacle in trying to decide what was quarry material and what was natur al obsidian scatter
Rock art sites were represented by one pictograph and three petroglyphs Thirty-six sites were recorded and defined as temporary campsites Five sites were classified as utilized rock shelters; 3 village sites and one milling station were also noted. Eight isolated f i n ds consisting of flaked stone tools or projectile points and 2 rock rings were also found in the study area. In the Caso Range 8 historic sites associated with 19th-century mining were l ocated.
The study produced a high inventory level, 29% of the study area. Based upon this level, it is assumed that 4 44 sites can be predicted per square mile Clewlow recommended that large portions of the KGRA be included within the National Register of Historic Places No action to this effect has yet been und~rtaken by the Navy
(DESE~T NEWS page 2)
Michael Mcintyre (Greenwood and Associates) recently authored a report which was a cultural resources overview for Edwards Air Force Base . During the course of the field work 146 sites were located. Of these sites, 119 were associated with either aboriginal lithic reduction or the processing of flakes cores and stone tools Other aboriginal sites included 15 camps a village and a rockshelter Historic sites · recorded included 2 mines S wells or trash deposits 2 homesteads and one corral The final report is nearing comp let ion
A Class II cultural resources inventory of the Bureau of Land Management s Bodie and Coleville Planning Units has been prepared by Larry S. Kob.ori,_ _Co.l.in_ I. Bus.by, __ an.d ___ _ _ _ James C Bard (Basin Research Associates) Their area of concern was south of Mono Lake and near the area of Coleville north of Bishop A total of 220 SOS acres were included in the total study area. During the inventory 426 prehistoric sites and 64 historic sites were recorded in the Bodie Planning Unit Only 26 prehistoric sites and 2 historic sites were located in the Coleville area.
Of the 426 sites in Bodie 260 were lithic scatters (primarily obsidian) 124 were iso lated finds 22 temporary campsites, 13 milling stations 10 rock alTgnrrients (hunting blinds) 3 rock art sites 3 shelters and 1 quarry In the Coleville area 10 sites were isolated finds 13 were lithic scatters and 3 were classified as milling stations Of the total of 66 historic sites, 18 were determined to be (Basque shepherd) tree graffiti 15 were isolated finds, 10 were campsites 7 were trash dumps and 6 were homesteads Five railroads, one rock carving a mine one Anglo settlement, and a charcoal pit were noted. This report has been published by the BLM and is available in limited numbers from Eric Montizambert BLM, Bakersfield. (Ed. : Some nos above are in error)
An archaeological excavation by .JoAnne C Leonard (San Bernardino County Museum Assn.) w1fhiii. a large complex of sand dunes on the north side of the Mojave River near P.inkley produced a series of interesting radiocarbon dates The 3 dtes all on charcoal, were 3210 + 105 BP (UGa-3344) or 1260 B C. 3295 + 80 BP (UGa-3345) or 1345 BC and 3025 + 75 BP or 1075 BC
Leonard excavated 127 ten-centimeter levels Artifacts recovered during the excavation total 3 713 These remains were further sub divided into four categories : 128 tools 391 manufacturing waste 2 206 faunal remains and 988 fire-affected rock. Surface cultural assemblage items included metates, manos hammerstones projectile points knives scapers, potsherds thermally-fractured rock and flaking detritus Interestingly Leonar found what she felt was the tip of an Elko point The dates tend to corroborate that this site complex does fall within the Elko time period More excavation and positive results will be necessary before any final determination can be made Fortunately the site will not be destroyed, but wi 11 be
·1
preserved. The collection is housed as a unit at the San Bernardino County M"useum
Richard Norwood (RF.CON) conducted a cultural resource survey f or a portion of the Earp to Johnson Valley, California Endure Racecourse r oute A team surveyed 68 miles of course beginning south of Danby Dry · LaKe and continuing into Johnson Valley. Typical of this p ortion of the desert sites are sporadic and consist of isolated finds and' some lithic scatters Norwood located 13 isolated flakes ·and small sites and 3 historic sites associated with the activity of General Patton s 1942 43 maneuvers Upon a r e turn vis it to one of the site areas, they found an
_ unexp..Loded 500-pound_JJ.omb on the :r_ace_cou_rse. The bomb also dates to the 1940s
Dennis Quillen (WESTEC) conducted a survey of the Superior Valley Range in the Mojave Desert The proposed range is located approximately 30 miles northwest of Barstow and contains about 50~000 acres
The field work consisted of an intensive 100% inventory of 9 separate target areas and proposed access roads Stage II consis consisted of a random sampling design of 5% of the remaining range lying outside of the specific study areas surveyea during Stage I The final stage (III) involved the selection and survey of 5% of the remainder of the range, focusing upon areas of highest intuitive site probahi lit
Prehistoric sites located and recorded during the first stage included 10 li thic scatters and 3 temporary camps. Historic sites included 10 dumps 6 mines and 6 camps one mining claim, one hearth, and a windmill Isolated finds include 37 chipped stone items 3 ground stone and one automobile club sign (1920s) Prehistoric sites identified and recorded during the Stage II survey included 9 temporary camps 4 lithic scatters and one quarry site Four mines 2 dumps and 3 mining claims comprise the historic sites
Dennis Quillen was also responsible for surveying approximately 7700 acres in the Mojave B Range for the U S NRvy Quillen reported 25 previously unrecorded sites, of which 21 were prehistoric and 4 were historic. In the Wingate Wash area (made famous as the pass from which the 20-mule teams t raversed from Harmony Borax Works to Mojave in the 18 80s) 10 li thi c scatters, 2 chalcedony quarries one historic dun,p and 2 historic era mining camps were located. The southern Panamint Valley study area revealed one lithic scatter and an isolated tool Two lithic scatters and one rock shelter with chalcedony materials was found in the South Con vofi are a. At Amity B;ring Quillen noted an istoric mine
e petroglyph associated with 2 hunting blinds, and a:historic mine was recorded at Early Spring. Village sites were found at both Lane Willow Spring and Hidden Spring.
(continue d on next page)
( I -
(DESERT NEWS page 3)
Robert E. Reynolds (San Bernardino County Museum Association) surveyed 2000 acres near the Calico Ghost Town for the renewal of silver mining in the Calico Mountains As could be anticipated, the majority of the sites were associated with historic mining activity dating to the boom days of Calico (1881-1892) These sites (26) included historic mines and associated structures, utility routes and trails, and historic dumps Six prehistoric sites and 9 isolated artifacts primarily consisting of rhyolite and chalcedony flakes were also r ecorded.
Charl es Rozaire (Los Angeles County Museum) conducted a survey for Southern California Edison in _anticipatfon o_f _the Wests first Solar Energy Plant and the Coolwater Coal Station, near Barstow. Rozaire recorded 2 previously unrecorded sites on the banks of the Mojave River. The sites included a flake scatte r (primarily jasper)' and a prehistoric butchering site A historic site complex was also noted. This site (near old Fish Ponds) included an irrigation system, a corral a cement-lined basin a refuse dump and a historic well -all of which were associated with pioneer
agriculture on the Mojave Desert
Jay Thesken. and Dennis Galle gos (l'ffiSTEC) reported that 17 sites were locatea for the IT Sanitary Chemical Disposal Pond in Imperial County Of these sites, 16 (89%) contained lithic items 1 3 (72%) contained ceramics, 12 (67%) contained milling items, and 2 sites contained fire hearths. The isolated finds included lithics tools, and ceramics The report indicates that the artifact density ranged from O 2 to 10 items per 10 square meters The hearths were test excavated and revealed no subsurface material
The U.S Navy finally approved release of von Werlhof and von Wer lhof's 19 77 report entitled "Archaeological Examinations of Certain Portions of the Chocolate Mountains" (northern Imperial County) In 1977 the authors, Jay and Sherilee von Werlhof (Imperial Valley Co llege Museum Foundation) with students from Imperial Valley College recorded 183 archaeological sites A phenomenal 83 of these were sleeping circles 30 were house rings, 3 cairns 22 trails , 14 ceramic and 8 flake scatters, and 15 were isolated occurrences The remaining 12 sites were miscellaneous sites including historic mines and associated debris Von Werlhof speculates that the site density is 2 2 sites per square mile, and feels that this is "typical of the southern dese rts II Jay hopes to be able to continue his survey on the gunnery range in the ne xt year or so
Philip J Wilke, James P Barker and Carol H. Rector (University of California, Riverside) produced a sample survey on the prop osed Allen-Warner Valley, Western Transmission Line for Southern California Edison A total of 171 2 linear miles of ihventory was conducted. During the course
ofthe survey 61 sites were recorded and 146 isolated artifacts were l ocated. The· 61 sites included 3 rock concentrations, 6 quarry sites 2 rock alighments 1 trail, 4 rock rings 3 pottery loci, 1 petroglyph, 7 rockshelters and 44 lithic scatters They estimate that the si te densities for the various corriders are : 1 site to each 11 03 miles of the Cadiz line; 1 site to each 6 4 miles of the Cima line; 1 site per 4196 (sic) miles of the Baker line; 1 site per 3.36 miles of the Silurian Hills line;. and one site per 7 7 mile s of the Sidewinder (Barstow area) line
As many of you may know the Yuha Skeleton was stolen from the Imperial Val l ey College Museum Last fall. -Although,- t-he- F-BI - is still - · investigating the case, the materials still have not been recovered. Hopefully by the next report in this newsletter the materials will have been recovered and sent to the Smithsonian Institution.
The fol l owing list is a fairly comp l ete one of radiocarbon dates £rom the· · ·e·i Mo· ave Desert e ine at the Mojave River area north to Ridgecrest east to Baker and west to the Tehachapis) The dates from Newberry Cave are courtesy of Allen Davis M.A. candidate at the Uniyersity of California, Riverside. The other lists of dates are from "The Archaeology of Selected Springs and Plays on Fort Irwin and in Portions of the Avawatz Mountains" by Russell L. Kaldenberg, published by The San Bernardin6 C6unty Mus·euni Quar·terly, Vol XXCIII No. 3 and 4 Spring and Summer 18 1981
If anyone else has any information concerning Carifornia Desert Archaeofo·gy, please contact me at 1695 Spruce Street, Riverside CA 92507
I RADIOCARBON DATES FROM NEWBERRY CAVE 1 CA-SBr-199
Years B.P. Date B.C. Lab. It SBCM ii Descri:etion
2470+ 250 1020 B c LJ 993 3-102-19 .Figurine ·fragments
3015+ 90 1065 B c UCR-1095 3-102-7 Elderberry dart shaft
3015+200 1065 B. C UCR-1093 E-102-203 Reed dart shaft
3070+185 1120 B c UCR-1092 E-102-202 Reed dart shaft
3205+170 1255 B c UCR-1097 3-102-79 Figurine coil
3300+180 1350 B c UCR-1103 E-102-204 Reed dart shaft
3320+180 1370 B c UCR-1096 4-102-201 Figurine split twig
3765+100 1815 B c UCR-1094 4-102-200 Willow dart shaft
7400 +100 5 450 B c UCLA-759 ? Wood rat midden
11 600 +500 96 so B.C UCR-1143 1-102-200 Ground sloth ribs
(courtesy of Allen Davis. Riverside)
Uni ve rsi ty of California,
8
(DESERT NEWS page 4)
II KNOWN ARCHAEOLOGICAL RADIOCARBON DATES FROM THE UPPER MOJAVE DESERT
Sample No.
Y-2406
QC-937
UCR-843
UCR-3398
UCR-3345
UCR-3344
UCR-3346
LJ 596
UCR-705
UCR-938
UCR-942
UCR-941
UCR-939
UCR- 940
UCR-937
UCR-770
UCR-767
UCR-763
UCR-766
UCR-384
UCR-761
UCR- 383
UCR- 764
UCR-765
UCR- 768
Site
Bench Mark Bay
SBr 3427
SBr 616
SBr 3801
SBr 189
SBr 189
SBr 189
Newberry Cave
SBr 1455
SBr 616
SBr 616
SBr 616
SBr 616
SBr 616
SBr 616
SBr 260
SBr 259
SBr 2156
SBr 246
SBr 259
SBr 260B
SBr 259
SBr 2156
SBr 2159
SBr 128
(from Kaldenberg 1981:11)
Date B .P·.
10 270 + 160
7 350 + 115
5 070 + 120
3 190 + 695
3 295 + 80
3 210 + 105
3,025 + 75
2 970 + 250
1,160 + 100
1 130 + 100
1 095 + 100
1,050 + 100
850 + 100
825 + 100
775 + 100
5 70 + 150
560 + 110
390 + 140
Calculated Date
8480 8320 B .C
5515 5285 B C
3700 4190 BC
1925 545 B C
1425-126 5 BC
136 5 -115 5 B C
1000 llSO B C
1270 770 B C
A.D 690 890
A.D 720-920
A.D 900-1040
A.D 800-1000
A.D 1000:-1200
A.D 1025-1225
A.D 1075-1275
A. D 1230-1530 E Cronese
A.D 1280-1500 E Cronese
A.D 1420-1700 W Cronese
ISO B.P + 1800 A.D E Cronese
150 B.P + 1800 A.D . E Cronese
150 BP + 1800 A.D E Cronese
ISO B.P + 1800 A. D E Cronese·
100 B.P + 1800 A.D W Cronese
100 B.P + 1850 A.D W Cronese
100 BP+ 1850 A.D E Cronese
9
Reference
Radiocarbon 1969:5 3
Robert Reynolds (SBCM) Pers onal Communication
Rector Swenson Wilke 1979
Sutton 1980
J Leonard 1980
J Leonard 1980
J Leonard 19 80
Hubbs et al 1965 : 111
R. Kaldenberg 1978
Rector Swenson Wilke 1979
Rector Swenson Wilke 1979
Rector Swenson Wilke 1979
Rector Swenson Wilke 1979
Rector Swenson Wilke 1979
Rector Swenson Wilke 1979
Drover 1979
Drover 1979
Drover 1979
Drover 19 79
Drover 1979
Drover 1979
Drover 1979
Drover 1979
Drover 19 79
Drover 1979
(DESERT NEWS page S)
III RADIOCARBON DATES ON GEOLOGICAL PHENOMENA IN THE MOJAVE DESERT
Site
1 E Cronese Lake: Tufa
2 E Cronese Lake: Tufa
3. Lake Mohave : on Anodonta shells between 925 and 930 ft level
4 Lake Mohave : late high stand
5 Panami nt Dry Lake: "environment date"
6 Lake Mohave: late high stand
7 Panamint Dry Lake: organic mat
8 Lake Mohave: late high stand
9 Lake Mohave: early high ievel
10 Lake Mohave : period of overflow
11 Lake Mohave : early high level
12 Lake Mohave : antedates "Lake Mohave comp lex"
13 Lake Mohave: period of overflow
14 Lake Mohav~ period of overflow
Sample No.
UCR-784
UCR-769
LJ-200
Y-1592
UCLA-989
Y- 15 93
UCLA-990
Y 1591
Y 1590
Y-1588
Y 15 89
Y 1585
Y 1586
Y-1587
15 Pluvial Manix Lake: on tufa LJ-269 below the high stand shoreline
(3-15 are from Taylor and Meighan 1978 : 180-191)
(from Kaldenberg 1981:6)
Date
3 500 + 180 (1550 B.C)
5 373 + 190
9,640 + 240 (7690 BC)
9,900 + 100 (7950 BC.)
10 020 + 120 (8070 B C
10 500 + 100 (8630 BC)
10 ,520 + 140 (8570 B.C)
10 700 + 100 (8750 BC
11 320 + 120 (9370 B C.)
13 040 ~ 120(11 090 B.C
13 290 :_ 240(11 340 BC
13,620 :_ 16 0(11 670 BC . )
14 550 :_ 140(12,600 BC)
15 350 :_ 240(13,400 B.C
17 540 ~ 400(15 590 BC
Drover 1979
Drover 1979
Warren & Decosta 1964
Radiocarbon 1969:582-584
E Davis 1967:345
Radiocarbon 1969:582-584
E Davis 1967:345
Radiocarbon 1969:582-584
Radiocarbon 1969:582-584
Radiocarbon 1969:582-584
Radiocarbon 1969:582-584
Radiocarbon 1969 : 582-584
Radiocarbon 1969 : 582-584
Radiocarbon 1969:582 584
Radiocarbon 1962:227
••• FRANK LATTA S LATEST BOOKS/EDITIONS AVAILIIBLE
Several of the important San Joaquin Valley historian Frank F Latta's books are now available through Bear State Books of Santa Cruz;
Handbook of Yokuts Indians (2nd. ed.), first published 1n 1949 1s a classic which has been out of print but which deserves to be in every California archaeologists library It i s available to the general public for $25 00 but to SCA members for ~21 00 (765 pp )
... Tailholt Tales (2nd ed. of ~he 1929 Uncle Jeff's Story) tells the story of Thos Je Herson Mayfield who lived with the Choinumne on Kings River Foreword by J.P Harrington (323 pp., $18 75 to public $16 25 to SCA members)
WRITE TO BEAR STATE BOOKS, P.O. Box 759, Santa Cruz , CA 95060 (Prices include everything)
10
Death Valley •·49ers, the story of the Jay Hawks and a group of families traveling from Salt Lake City to Los Angeles (365;{18 75/16 25)
Dal ton Gan~ ·nays (incl California a acti nt1es) (2 3 pp , $18 75/$16 25)
. Saga of Rancho El Tejon, based on data from Jose Jesus Lopez maJordomo of the ranchos for 65 years. (293 pp $18. 75/$16 25)
and Latta s latest ublication, a 685-comp1 at1-on o 1.s interviews wit a 1 orn1an and Mexican pioneers, begun in the 1920 s when a few contemporaries were slill alive:
Joa uin Murrieta and His Horse newly published in Novem er 1 80 general public, only $21 00 to SCA
SOCIETY for CALIFORNIA ARCHAEOLOGY
SCA DISTRICT CLEARINGHOUSES--UPDATE The SCA District Clearinghouses are
subject to modification as l ocal circumstances change availability of volunteer Coordinators range of territory covered, etc. The accompanying map is an updat e of the SCA Clearinghouse Districts as currently in effect.
The major trend in Clearinghouse activities in recent years has been a shift in ·focus away from actual data compilation in terms of site record and map maintenance towards more general tasks of communication and review of agency activities State funded Regional Offices of the Office of Historic Preservation not to be confused with the voluntary SCA District Clearinghouses have taken over the data compilation functions from the Clearinghouses whose goals remain the following:
1 Organize cooperation among local archaeologists through occasional meetings and communccations
2 Encourage and support the numerous local research institutions
3 Develop and update inclusive regional research problem statements and appropriate methods
4 Organize communication channels between the various local Native American communities and archaeologists
5 Organize the monitoring and commenting on local environmental impact rep orts
6 Develop appreciation and understanding of cultural resources with local planners including city and county agencies and government personne l
The success with which the· SCA Clearinghouses carry out these activities depends in part on the particular characteristics of the various regional archaeological communities the availability of local leadership willing and able to volunteer for the organization and work; and the degree to which other local institutions --i.e. universicies regional offices etc. --iire already carrying out the tasks In some areas these much-ne eded activities particularly the review functions , are not carried out at all
As an SCA member, you are invited to examine the potent ial needs your Clearinghouse could be serving for your community Help fulfill their promise by getting involved in making the Clearinghouses work. If archaeology is to progress we need coordination and
·~:·;:. .. - · ·-·-l'T - ·.:. / !
/ QZ
SCA DISTRICT CLEARINGHOUSES & COORDINATORS
01 Northwest
02 No rtheast
03 Sacramento Valley
OS South Central Coast
David A. Fredrickson Anthropology Depart ment California State ·Univ ,Sonoma 1801 E Cotati Avenue Rohnert Park, CA 94928
(707) 664-2312 or 238 1
Mark Kowta Anthropology Department California State University Chico, CA 95926
(916) 895-6192
Robert L Edwards Anthropology Department Cabrillo College
sharing of knowledge and resources on every level
6500 Sequel Drive Aptos, CA 95003
(408) 524-6294 or 476 7468
LINDA KING
11
!;6 San Joaquin Valley
07N Ventura
" 7S Los Angeles Area
08S Southern Desert
09 Orange County
10 South "Central
11 South Coast
12S South Cnaimel
12N North cliannel
Dudley M Varner Anthropology Department California State University Fresno, CA 93740
(209) 487 100 2
Paul Aiello Anthropology Department Ventura College Ventura CA 9300~
(805) 642 3211
Sheila Callison Anthropology Department Oxnard College PO Box 1600 Oxnard CA 93032
N~TI\LE N'ERI(AN POLI.CY COMMITTEE
The first meeting of the Native Anerican Policy Committee was held January · 10, 1981, at California State College , Sacramento This committee is unique both in membership and in purpose The committee will consist of profess ional archaeo l ogists and anthropologists and of Native American elders, religious leaders and political leaders The committee will meet at least 4 times in 198 1 at different locations around the state We first hope to identify regional and ·local problems in the relationship between cultural resource professionals and the California Native American communities with which they interact Native American and SCA members of the committee will then work together to develop policy recommendations for the resolution of these problems Interested
Daniel F McCarthy - ----- - parties may con fad tne · chairman- Robert - ------- -Ar chaeological Research Unit Laidlaw for further information at PO Box University of California 608 Shingle Springs CA 95682 Riverside , CA 92 5 2 1 '
(71t.) 787 3885
Jay von Werlhof Imperial Valley County
Muse um P O Box 15 8 Imperial, CA 92251
(714) 352 8320
Constance Cameron Anthropology Department California State University Fullerton, CA 92634
(714) 773-3977
Robert Schiffman Anthropology Department Bakersfield College 1801 Panorama Drive Bakersfield, CA 93305
(805) 395 4391
Christopher White Anthropology Department San Diego State University San Diego, CA 92182
(714) 636 6300
Michael A. Glassow Anthropology Department University of California Santa Barhaa, CA 93106
(805) 96 1 2054; 2257(messages)
Robert L Hoover Social Sciences Department Cal ifornia Polytechnic State
University San Luis Obispo, CA 93407
(805) 546-2260
ROBERT LAIDLAW
EXECUTIVE BOARD ~EETING MiNUTESJ OCT 24J 1980 Los Angeles Call to order 8:22 p m.
Board members present: Linda King Russ Kaldenberg Ron May, Chester King proxy for J Bingham John Maguire (proxy for J Gothold) Chuck James Jane Rosentha l Guests and members present: Paul Chace Reed Dan Whitney Leslie Shoup-Wessel
Judy th
MINUTES: July 26 and Sept 6 minutes approved Ron moved that the minutes of Feb 9 should be printed; seconded by Kaldenberg; passed 5 to 1
TRE ASURERS R~PORT: John Maguire speaking for Jane Gothold reported $6,685 36 as of July 26; after disbursement is $5 ,121 26 currently Paul Chace spoke with Jane and he will follow up her contacts on officers i nsurance Imperial Valley College Museum Building Fund acknowledged receipt of the SCA s donation
BUSINESS OFFICE: Russ reported on his and Jane Gothold's trip to the Business Office He spoke with Connie C.ameron and recommended that a full-time student be appointed to administer the office Depending on availability of space the office will either remain at Fullerton or move to Long Beach State. Linda King will report on the resolution of the problem.
PUBLICATIONS: The forthcoming volume of occasional papers was disc ussed It was recommende d t hat Gary Breschini incl ude the
NEW SCA VOLUNTEERS WELCOMED
2 additional articles--M Kowta s research design and a coccidiomycos is discussion Kowta s fin al version will be sent to the Executive Committee for review and comments then sent directly to Kowta
Besides new Clearinghouse Coordinators ·Sheila Rus s ir1qui red whether we could publish Kuhn s Callison (07S) and Dan Mcr.arthy (08N) (see listing discussion of the SCA s history He will send above, we would like to welcome Robin Wells, who copies to the Board and Reschini for review He will be in charge of the Schenk Archives; Gary also said that 5 copies of J Winters publica-Breschini Chairman of the Public Education tion remain and should be placed in the Schenk CoIIDnittee an·d soon to be keeper and computerizer Archives; Linda King will check o~ the archival of ~he miiling list; and Pandora Snethkamp (Chmn ),S!atus Ka)denberg an~ Go~hold will update the uav1d Abrams and Lowell Bean of the Conflict list of available publications for the Resolution Committee News lette r . (contin ued on page 23)
12
MEMBERSHIP 1980
A David Abrams Cosumnes River Co ll ege
NOTICE: Use of this membership list for commercial or promotional purposes is prohibited witho ut prior written permission from tre Society for California Archaeology c/o Department of Anthropology, Ca lifornia State University Fullerton California 92634
INDIVIDUAL ME~BERS
James Ba ldw in, Jr 10651 Zodiac Drive Riverside CA 92503
James A Bennyhoff 258 Collins St , #2 San Francsico CA 94118
Ruth Blank, Librarian San Jose Indian Center 3485 East Hills Drive San Jose CA 95127
840 1 Center- Pa rkwa-y- -- - Mary ·A Baldw in· --- -·- A·r·l ·ene·-Ben·son - ---· -· 1125 Wi l so n Drive Dana E Bleitz-Sanburg
707 W Hellman Avenue Alhambra CA 91803
Sacra men to CA 95823 3625 Curtis Street
Marcia Ackerman 230 South Roop Susanvi lle CA 96130
David Adams 1111 Fifth Street Redding CA 9600 1
Margaret Adams 153 El Monte Avenue Ve nt ura CA 93003
Pau l V Aiello Anthropology Dept Ventura College Ventura, CA 93003
Clark Akatiff 16 8 Tennyson Palo Alto CA 94301
Lawrence P Allen 1133 Gladys Avenue Long Beach, CA 90804
Joyce Alpert 1766 Treseder Drive El Cajon CA 92021
Michael Anderson 401 E Mariposa Dr Redlands CA 92373
Stephen B Andrews 2810 S "H" St #30 Bakersfield CA 93304
Nancy August 3185 Eastman Lane Petaluma CA 94952
Irina Averkieff 1320 Pacific Aven ue Venice CA 90291
B
Suzanne Baker 14 6 4 La P 1 ay a Sa n Francisco CA 94122
San Diego CA 92106
Peter Banks 5916 Dover Street Oakland, CA 94609
Patty Baratt i -Sal l an i 295 1 N Rancho Dr, #29 Las Vegas NV 89106
James C. Bard 2399 Prospect St , #3 Berkeley CA 94704
Leo R. Barker 29 14 California St , Apt San Franc i sco CA 94 11 5
Tilly Barling 616 Sylvia Avenue Ridgecrest, CA 93555
Eloise R Barter 260 1 Sierra Bou l evard Sac ramento, CA 9582 5
Catherine Bayer PO Box 313 Fol som CA 95630
Lowell J Bean 1555 Lakeside Drive Oakland CA 946 12
Yo l ande S. Beard PO Box 16 St Helena CA 94574
W i l 1 i a m C B e a t ty , J r 750 E I nd ianaoolis Fresno, CA 93704
Roberta L Becker 1032 W Norwich Fresno CA 93705
Robert S Bego l e 722 North Pine Street Anaheim CA 92805
Daniel A Bell 2838 Claire Court Sacramento CA 95821
1
13
Sird Valley CA 93065
Charlotte L Benson Anthropology Dept ,DH-05William W Bloomer University of Washington647 Coronado Street Seattle , WA 98195 Redding CA 95003
Mary F Benson Barbara Eocek 8943 Arcadia Ave ,Apt 5 1777 Woodland #22 San Gabriel CA 91775 Palo Alto, CA 94308
Vance G Bente 328 A "G" St. San Rafael , CA 94901
James S Ben ton Box 86 Baker CA 92309
Francis C Berg 4348 Pacifi c Avenue Riverside CA 92509
Judith Bergthold 15082 Lyn n Avenue Los Gatos CA 95030
Monte R Berry 4672 E Nevada Fresno CA 93702
Stan Berryman 856 S Anza St F.l Cajo n CA 92020
Jeffery C Bingham 2450 hCSi qua Lane Pen ryn CA 95663
Jeanne D Binning 810 D Prescott Way Riverside CA 92507
Charles W Rlack 708 Mtlls Avenue Modesto CA 95350
Ka ren 81 akeney 944 Cameron Street Arroyo Gran de CA 93420
Susan E Bond 24319 Burbank Boulevard Woodland Hills CA 91367
John G Borcher 1061 Dolores · St San Francisco, CA 94110
Larry F Bourdeau 275 E Shasta Ave #2 5 Chi co CA 95926
Victoria Bowen 635 El m Street Seaside CA 93955
Larry L Bowl es 445 West "E" Street Colton CA 92324
Michael J Boynton PO Box 431 Willows, CA 95988
John P Brady PO Box 1328 Twain Harte CA 95383
Yvonne Brady 1677 Spence Street Simi Valley CA 93065
Allan Bramlette 1095 Sun Road McKinleyville CA 955 21
William H Breece 1433 Superior #111 Newport Beach CA 92663
Gary S Breschini 627 Baumann ca ~troville CA 95012
Sylvia M. Broadbent Anthropology De partment Un i v e rs i ty of Cai i f o rn i a Riverside CA 92521
James P Brock 4819 River Avenue Newport Bach CA 92663
Richard A. Brook 1055 Blaine St , Apt . 118 Riverside CA 92507
Cl ark W. Brott 3188 Lawrence Road Redding CA 96002
Bonita Brown PO Box 102 Silver City NV 89428
Carol G Brown 3922 Midd1egate Road Westlake Village CA 91361
Gregory J Brown 159 Beverly Street San Francisco, CA 94132
John E Brown Jr 3922 Middlegate Road Westlake Village CA 91361
Mag gie C Brown Box 22 Silver City NV 89428
Ma 'rY A Brown 5437 Central Avenue Riverside CA 92504
Francis E Buck 1177 Linden St Apt 8 Riverside CA 92507
John J Bullaro 39637 Calle Es sencial Green Valley CA 91350
Kathleen Burgi 211 Avenida Santa Catalina La Habra CA 90631
David C Burkenroad 316 9 Bremerton Pl ace La Jolla CA 92037
Wanda Burka 11914 Ocean Park Blvd. We s t Los Angeles c~ 90064
Colin I Busby 4001 Fruitvale Oakland CA 94602
c Sheil a M. Calli s on 1168 N Curri .er Avenue Simi Valley CA 93f·6 5
Constance Cameron 14602 Montevideo Whittier CA 90605
Donald G Campbell 625 Everitt Mem. Hwy. Mt Shasta CA 96067
R. J Cantwell 13587 Avenue 24 Pixley CA 93256
Charles C Carrillo 3135 Q Street Eureka CA 95501
Jack Carpenter --5-12 0 P r a th e r '.'.A'.'
Richmond CA 94805
Toni Carrell National Park Service P O Box 728 Santa Fe NM 87501
Richard L Carrico 2562 Ridgeview rrive San Diego CA 92105
Robert Cartier 496 N 5th Street San Jose CA 95112
Lelia 8 . Cass dy Box 848 Ukiah, CA 95482
Helen C Castillo 747 Goldbelt Ave Juneau AK 99801
Paul G Chace 1823 Kenora Drive Escondido CA 92027
Ronald S Chambliss 612 22nd St Santa Monica CA 90402
Donald S Chang 817 27th St #C Sacramento CA 95816
Le a Chang 376 Orange St , #2 Oakland CA 94610
Franklin G Chapel Jr 1223 Luanne Avenue Fullerton CA 92631
Carl H Chapman 211 Edgewood Columbia MO 65201
Joseph L Chartkoff 114 Sea View Drive El Cerrito CA 94530
Gail W Chas e 1115 Avoca Avenu~ Pasadena CA 91105
David Chavez 644 Funston Ave San Francisco, CA 94118
Paul a Chiotti 7409 Barbi Lane Rohnert Park CA 94928
Don D Chris ten sen 2568 Yale Place Costa Mesa CA 92626
Christine J Cifelli 6782 Marietta Avenue Garden Grove CA 92645
John R. Cook 4720 54th St San Diego CA 92115
Roger A. Cook 5605 Rickey Ori ve S acr,;.men to CA 95822
Jacquelyn M. Cooper 281-D Harkins Ave Menlo Park CA 94025
Jennifer Corsiglia 826 Venice Blvd. Venice CA 90291
Terry L Cirilo Joyce· M. Corum 2 041 Wh inc.bat ___ ··- __ H5.2-.M.a..r..Lb.o rough , J\~ !.! .. -6 San Diego, CA 92123 San Diego CA 92105
Matthew R. Clark Box 652 El Granada, CA 94018
Michael P Claytor 470 High Street Auburn CA 95603
Alan Clayton P O Box 12616 Fresno CA 93778
Joyce M. Clevenger 2874 Westhaven Drive Anaheim, CA 92804
E F red Cl ewe l l J r 4 7 8 N Far re 11 Palm Springs CA 92262
Ed Clewett 715 Mary St , #6 Reddiny CA 96001
C William Clewlow Jr Box 5138 Santa Monica CA 90405
Lora Cline P O Box 431 Jacumba, CA 92034
Edwin Clubb 3958 N Carruth Fresno CA 93705
Mandy Cole 624 Poppy Avenue Corona del Mar CA 92625
Corinne Coles Contra Costa Col.lege San Pablo CA 94806
George R. Coles Contra Cos ta College San Pablo CA 94806
Debbie Col s ton 21186 Jack Page Road Sonora CA 95370
14
Marie G Cottrell 12918 Haster St. Garden Grove CA 92640
Norma J Craig 1460 Willow Atwater CA 95301
Steven E Craig PO Box 617 Goleta, CA 93017
Ann B Crane 642-A Ocean Park Blvd Santa Monica CA 90405
Michael K. Crist 978 N Harrison Fresno CA 93728
Karen Crotteau 3956 O Neill Ori ve San Mateo CA 94403
Paul~ M. Cun zeman 23825 Anza, #220 Torrance CA 90505
Nancy T Curri den San Bernardino National
Forest 144 N Mt View Avenue San Bernardino CA 92408
Kathi Cursi 6642 N Maroa Fresno, CA 93704
D James S Daugherty 20875 Valley Green Dr #119 Cupertino CA 95014
John Daugherty 7701 College Twn Dr #23 Sacramento CA 9 5826
Alan Davis 2565 Fifth Street La Verne CA 91750
Bi 11 i e J • D a. v.i s 6648 Gatlo Street El Cerrito CA 94530
Emma Lou Davis 1236 Concord Street San Diego, CA 92106
Donna A Day PO Box 134 Challenge, CA 95925
Sandra Day 7902 Lk Andrita Ave San Diego CA 92119
Krista Chere Deal 669 S Auburn, #2 Grass Valley CA 95945
B -r. i an D . .Di 1-1 on- - . Institute of Archaeology University of California Los Angeles CA 90024
Gail D. Egol.f . 1020 W Evan Hewes Space #30 El Centro CA 92243
Tamar W. Ehrsas Keith A. Dixon 691 Levering Ave , Apt 23 Department of Anthropology Los Angeles CA 90024 California State University Long Beach, CA 90840 Janet P Eidsness
Joseph E Doctor P O Box 33 Exeter CA 93221
William H Doelle 851 Pale~mo Drive Santa Barbara CA 93105
Alice E Doidge 110~ S Salinas Street
c/o General Deli very Big Bear CA 96010
Rollin O Enfield Rte 2 Box 150-A Bishop CA 93514
Michael Engle 3789 Manila Drive Oakland CA 94609
Jon .Fernandez - .. 1324 Pa cifi c Ave Venice .CA 902'9 l
Robert Fiedler 425 Warren Dr , #6 San Francisco CA 94131
Gary R Fink 6812 Quebec Court San Diego CA 92139
Laura Fitzsimmons 502 Fernwood Pacific Topanga CA 90290
Lisa FitzSimmons 933 Alamitos Ave.,#11 Long Beach CA 90813
Margaret FitzSimmons Sally Ann Dean Box 104 Inverness CA 94937
____ Sa nJa Barb a ra., CA_ 9_310 3 _ J.une A. En_gJ_i_s_h _____ _ Ge_o.gc.aplly .. De_p.ar:.t.men t . Dept of Anthropology UCLA
Karen E DeBry 520 W Acacia Avenue El Segundo, CA 90245
Ann M. De 1 1 av a 11 e 933 E. Vassar Fresno CA 93704
Carol R. Demcak 5108 Elkmont Drive Rancho Palos Verdes, CA 90274
Steve Den·dero 645 - 54th Street Sacramento CA 95819
Babara Denl!nberg 2010 Chestnut St #305 San Francisco CA 94123
Charlene Detlefs 916 Weston Road Scotts Valley CA 95066
James E Dot ta 2470 Wundham Redding CA 96001
Ronald D Douglas 1500 Clay St Newport Beach, CA 92663
Penny Doukus 4648 LaRica Baldwin Park, CA 91706
Toni Dragon P.O Box 1015 Malibu CA 90265
Mike Drews 24319 Burbank Blvd. Woodland Hills CA . 91362
William Dreyer 1143 N Cedar Street Chico, CA 95926
Patricia Duff 49 Carl San Francisco CA 94117 Marsha F Devot
6571 Segovia Cr. Huntington Beach CA 92647 Helene R. Dunbar
Robert Devot 6571 Segovia Cr. Huntington Beach
450 Golden Gate Avenue San Francisco CA 94102
Julie M. Dewey
CA 92647 Faith L Duncan 4407 East Fairmount Tucson AZ 85712
6613 Mt Holly Drive San Jose CA 95120
D Stephen Dibble P O Box 3733 Orange CA 92665
Linda E Dick PO Box 12690 UCSB Santa Barbara CA 93107
Joyce E Dietrick 286 Orange Avenue Long Beach CA 90802
Lee- A·>·.Oi$re9orip. 2856·· Wes .~h~v~n_ Dd ve Anaheim, CA 1.i2804
Y M. du Vernet 6652 Wynne Avenue Reseda CA 91335
E William E~khardt 4230- 42nd Street San Diego CA 92105
Bob Edberg 1125 w-ilson Drive Si mi Va 11 ey CA 93065 Robert L Edwards Dept of Anthropology Cabrillo Co llege 6500 Sequel Avenue Aptos CA 95003
15
Univ· of California Los Angeles CA 90024 Santa Barbara CA 93101
Mick Eohlert 1717 'Heritage Lane, #42 0 Sacramento CA 95815
Jon Ericson Peabody Museum 11 Di vinity Avenue Cambridge MA 02138
Jon Erlandson P 0. Box 5395 Santa Barbara
Meg Estabrook
CA 93108
2510 Witlkop Way, #65 Sacramento, CA 95825
Patricia A Etter 5521 Seaside Long Beach CA 90803
Robert W Evans 5948 E Lansing W Fresno CA 93727
William S Evans Jr 628 Eleventh Street Manhattan Be ~ch CA 90266
F Mary M Farrel 1 PO Box 10 USFS Lee Vining CA 93541
Nancy Farrell 1 Songsparrow Irvine CA 92714
Glenn J Farris 548 East 9th St Davis CA 95616
Scott Fedi ck 18622 Crest Avenue Castro Valley CA 94546
David J Fee 3528 21st Street San Francisco, CA 94114
Ka the r in e S F 1 y n n 661 Olive Ave Novato CA 94947
John C Ford 4906 Refugio Carlsbad, CA 92008
Amy E Foster 1046 Continental St.,
Apt 1 Redding CA 96001
John W Foster 8426 Hidden Valley
Ci rel e Fair Oaks CA 95628
David A Fredrickson 1940 Parker Street Berkeley, CA 94704
Nancy French 2 3 8 Li be r ty S t Petaluma CA 94952
John Fritz 243 Riverside Dr
#502 New York NY 10025
G Richard M Gadcon /
EMS I I 4052 Ingraham Street San Diego CA 92109
Lynn Gamb 1 e 653 Old Topanga
Canyon Road Topanga CA 90290
Do nna M. Garaventa 5 Whitaker Avenue Berkeley CA 94708
Alan P Garfinkel 2949 Portage Bay
#220 Davis CA 95616
Gerald R Gates P O .Box 2 42 Alturas CA 96101
H
Ard,, n Haenszel
Winfield Henn 1380- 2nd Street Anderson CA 9~007
Dean Gaum·cr PD Box 69
1382 Genevieve St #A Gregory H Henton San Berna,-,~ino C/l. 92405 P O Box 3083
DalfiS CA 95516
Julia George P O. Box 186 5 Chico CA95927
Ellen Elise Georgi c/o Arabian Bechtel
Co Ltd Jubai Post Office
via Ehahran Airpor: Jubail Saudi Arabia
Ber': A Gerow -Dept.-· o-f. --An th rop o.1.ogy Stanford University Stanford CA 94305
Ann Has ~ rman 11150 Regent #2 Los Angeles CA 90034
Barbara Ann H.;ll 1028 Wilmington Way Redwood City CA 94052
Dorothy H Hall 1522 \.J. Campbel 1 Phoenix AZ 85015
Doug Ha 11 ey - 3.5.40- .P-o rto 1 a . . Ori ve ··-
San ta Cruz, CA 95060
Patrick Ha1 inan Trudy Ginkus Vaughan 345 Franklin St
Chico, CA 95927
Dawn Henton P o Box 3083 ChiCl) CA 95927
Margaret G Herleman PO Box 119 Independence CA 93526
Mary Lou Heuett 11921-D Royal Road El Cajon CA 92021
Patricia A. Hicks --U-dCfl - ··AoTTene·
Portales NM 88130
Janet C Hightower Box 258 San Francisco CA 94102 719 Pritchard Ave
Extension Central Valley CA 9f019 Chapel Hi 11 NC 27514
Michael A. Glassow 72 7 E Anapamu Santa Barbara CA 93103
Glenn Gnoser 453-8 Bayside Road Arcata CA 95521
Betty Goerke 145 Martin Avenue Mill Valley CA 94941
Arlene Golant 9211 Venice Blvd Los Angeles CA 90034
Arlyn O Golder 544 Summit Ori ve Santa Cruz CA 95060
Jane R S Gothold 10121 Pounds Avenue Whittier CA 90603
Gregory Greenway 428 Stanford Avenue Roseville CA 95678
Roberta S Greenwood 725 Jacon Way Pacific Palisades
CA 90272
David E Griffin Jr Dept of Anthropology University of Missouri Colurbia MO 65201
Robert L Gross P O Box 15~ Elk CA 95432
Karl Gurcke Dept of Anthropology Univc>rsity of Idaho Moscow ID 83843
Theodore E Gutman 4101 Stansbury Ave Sherman Oaks CA 91423
Leiko Hamada llS Brooks Avenue Venice CA 90291
Stephen R. Hammond 3577 Spruce St. Riverside CA 92501
Robert Paul Hampson 45 West 9th Street Trac~, CA 95376
David C Hanna 3316 Adams Ave ·, #25 San Diego CA 92116
Ann Hardy 7 31 Ea:; t Hasp Ridgecrest CA 93555
Randall L Harr 1020 Redbud Drive Redding CA 96001
Louise Hastrup 824 E Hampton Way Fresno C/l. 93704
Trudy Haversat 627 Bauman Road CastrovilJe CA 95012
Janice Hawthorne 18919 Mui rki rk Dr Northridge CA ri1326
Susan Hector 7555 Volclay Drive San Diego CA 92119
Sheri A Heffley 298 S Gordon Way Los Altos CA 94022
James Heid 4386 S Es con di do, #5 La$ Vegas NV 89109
Bill Helmer 283 S 19th St San Jose CA 95116
Kathryn L Hi 11 17 Dudley Avenue #3 Venice CA 90291
Eugene G Hirtle Jr 2556 Francisco Drive Pinole CA 94564
John Hitch cock Box 1325 Hayfork CA 96041
Robert K. Hitchcock 1115 Emerald Bay Laguna Beach CA 92651
Bernice C Hodgman 419 S Commonwealth Los Angeles CA 90020
Miley P Holman 3615 Folsom St. San Francisco CA 94110
Jean M. Hood Kresge Box 64-6-239 Santa Cruz CA 95064
Robert L Hoover 1144 Buchon St San Luis Obispo CA 93401
Joseph W Hopkins. III 249 "B" Street Ashland OR 97520
Anita Hornback P O Box 7Z Nespelem WA 99155
Travis Hudson Santa Barbara Museum of
Natural History 2559 Puesta del Sol Santa Barbara CA 93105
Ann Hunt Box 30 Palo Cedro CA 96073
16
Jack Hun-ter 612 West 40th St San Pedro CA 90731
Laura S Hunter 413 Redbud Lane Hayward CA 94541
Lee Huxley 632 Ocean Park Blvd ,#12 Santa ~onica CA 90405
Pa ·Jl W Isaacs PO Box 904 Twain Harte CA 95353
Renee M Isaacs P O Box 904 Twain Harte CA 95353
Pamela J Ivie 970 Vermont St , #2 Oakland CA 94610
J
Robert J Jackson 826 Fifth Street Woodland CA 95695
Charles O James III P O Box 1266 Quincy, CA 9 5 9 71
E Henry James 371 Muriel Ori ve Barstow, CA 92311
John H Jameson Jr Box 1071 Worland WY 82401
Bruce A. Jenkins 12312 Marbel Avenue Downey CA 90242
David L Jennings 2222 West 35th Street San Pedro CA 90732
Peter M Jensen 1292 East 8th Street Chi co CA 95926
Patricia R. Jertberg 250 Beal Avenue Placentia CA 92670
Michele M. Jesperson 3157 Lemon St Riverside CA 92501
John R. Johnson 2529 San Marcos Pass Santa Barbara CA 93105
Keith L Johnson Dept. of Anthropology California State Univ Chico CA 95929
Melissa J Johnson 2721 "E" Street San Diego CA 92102
• Eric J.ohnston 264 W. San Madele Fresno CA 93"704
Jim Johnston Box 1595 Susanville CA 96130
Christine Jones 3440 Claremont Ave Long Beach, CA 90808
Terry Jones 1555 Samedra Avenue Sunnyvale CA 94086
Edgar Lee Jordan Jr P O Box 82 7 8 West Truckee CA 95737
K-Russell L Kaldenberg P O Box 650 Forest Falls CA 92339
Jane E Kamplain 428 S Garden Street Visalia CA 93277
Christopher Kavanaugh PO Box 3061 Thousand Oaks CA 91359
Phi l i p Ke a i rn s 8470 North Star Way Orangevale CA 95662
Diane Kelly 4824 Marietta ~ay Sacramento CA 95841
Donna M. Kerrigan 2022 Sand Hill Road Menlo Park, CA 94028
Janet Keswick PO Box 57 Villa Grande CA 95486
Thomas S Keter PO Box 730 Garberville CA 95440
Catherine Kilkes 5008 Tilden Avenue Sherman Oaks CA 91423
Chester King 653 Old Topanga Canyon
Road Topanga CA 90290
Linda King 1089 Broadway Avenue San Jose CA 95125
Tom King, Director Office of Cultural
Resource Preservation 1522 "K" St., N W -#410 Washington, DC 20605
Lavinia C Knight 809 N Richman Ave Fullerton CA 92632
Orton Knutson 2013 Fantero Ave Escondido, CA 92025
Makoto Kowta Dept of Anthropology California State Univ Chi co CA 95926
Jean F Krase 2750 Bordeaux Avenue La Jolla CA 92037
Carmen S p· 0 Box Virginia
89440
Kuffner 701 City NV
Clyde Kuhn P.O. Box 69 Davisi EA 95616 ··
Douglas E Kupel 2225 Ron Way San Diego CA 92123
L R. Laidlaw PO Box 1697 ldylwild, CA 92349
Carol M. Lane 7 Highland Avenue Piedmont CA 94611
Daniel O Larson 1941 Buckeye Road Willits CA 95490
Kim Lawson 5941 Mandrai n Santa Barbara CA 93107
Don Laylander 1920 E Grand #67 Escondido CA 92027
Thomas N Layton 1087 Broadway Avenue San Jose CA 95125
Me 1 ind a Le a ch 1441 Iroquois Avenue Long Beach CA 90815
Georgi a Lee Box 30877 Santa Barbara CA 93105
Mrs Ralph W Lenker 920 Ontario Escondido CA 92025
Richard N Lerner 2335 Stuart Street Berkeley CA 94705
Alan Leventhal Dept of Anthropology San Jose Stcte Univ San Jose, CA 95192
Valerie A. Levul ett 221 "J" Street Davis, CA95616
17
Vicki Lewis 13740. Westward Drive Fontana CA 92335
L E Lind 1004-A Street Redding CA 96001
Alexander J Lindsay Museum of Northern
Arizona Rt. 4, ·sox 720 Flagstaff AZ 86001
Karen Loeffler 200 Button St #37H Santa Cruz, CA 95060
Larry Loeher 3244 Overland Ave #3 Los -An·ge·l·es· · CA· 900 34
Danny S Lomholdt 10235 ·Madrid Way, #133 Spring Valley CA 92077
Mary Ann Lomhol dt 10235 Madrid Way, #133 Spring Vall~y CA 92077
Robert Lopez 261 South Petit Avenue Ventura CA 93003
Michael W. Love 3337 Diablo Circle Pinole CA 94564
Ramon T Lozada 344 Tourmaline Ct. Chula Vista CA 92011
Margaret M. Lyneis 1300 Shadow Mtn Pl Las Vegas · NV 89108
M Theo N Mabry 500 Newport Center Dr.
#525 Newport Beach CA 92660
Manny Mabunga 1423 15th Street Santa Monica CA 90404
Kim Mabunga 1423 15th Street Santa Monica, CA 90404
Heather Macfarlane c/o Dames & Moore 1100 Glendon Avenue Los Angeles CA 90024
Joanne MacGregor-Hanifan 26815 Alcon Drive Saugus CA 91350
Michael E Macko De~t of Anthropology Univ of California Santa Barbara CA 93106
Jack Maddock P O Box 293 Orange, CA 92666
N M. Magalousis 285\ Anita Laguna Beach, CA 92651
John P Maguire 15110 Talbot Drive La Mirada CA 90638
James G Maniery 3300 "I" Street
Upper East Apartment Sacramento CA 95816
James P Manning PO Box 1865 Chico CA95927
------- ---- ---Donald W Manuel 112 Natoma #17 Folsom CA 95630
Carmen Marion 9 2 3 E F a i rmo n t Fresno CA 93704
Richard Markley Tahoe National Forest Nevada City CA 95957
Linda Marquez Frees 2803 Cherry Street Berkeley CA 94705
C Chris Martinez 17349 Covello St Van Nuys CA 91406
Thomas J Maxwell Jr 60 01 sen Road Thousand Oaks ~A 91360
Ron May 6044 Estelle Street San Diego CA 92115
Ellen L. Mccann 3960 Van Buren Pl,, #8 Culver City, CA 90230
Daniel F McCarthy 10651 Zodiac Drive Riverside CA 92503
R. L McCarty 1316 Carson Las Vegas NV 89101
Les Tey C McCoy 8470 Via Sonoma, #32 La Jolla CA 92037
Tony Mc Curdy 6 44- c Ash 1 and Santa Monica CA 90405
Jim McDonald 623 Shasta Avenue Yreka CA 96097
Dennis McDougal 6496 Ellenview Ave. Canoga Park ' CA 91 3.07
Ch a r 1 o t t e McGowan 10101.Sierra Vista Ave
Avenue La Mesa CA ~2041
Michael Mcintyre 10519 Reseda Blvd Northridge CA 91326
Jeanette A Mc Kenna 6202 S Fr~ends Ave Whittier r.A ?0601
Denise H Mclemore 8414 Wonderland Blvd Redding CA 96001
Jean McMann 179 Lovell Ave Mi 11 Va 11 ey c.a. '.< 4 9 41
Charla f, ~kacham Mendocino NF, Box 431 Willows CA 95988
Mara Melandry 1334 Carlotta St Berkeley CA 94703
Don a 1 d S Mi 11 er U S Forest Service 6 3 0 S an s o me S t
Gail Morales 2 5 2 13 Woodward Ave Lomita CA90717
Mi ch a r: 1 J Mo r a tto 18015 Plaza Oriente Sonora CA 9537C
Joseoh W Morris 147 VEnetian Road Aptos CA 95003
Barbara S Morrison 115 Evandale Ave ,#E Mountain View CA
94 043
L,well R. Morrison 2138 Fenmar Ave #6 VenL',· CA 90291
Ma ry E · Moscatel 336 Stanford A·,e Santa Cruz CA 95062
Madonna L Moss Admi ra 1 ty Is 1 and
National MonL<ment Box 2097 Jtireau AK 99803
John L Mulder San Francisco CA 94111 1720 Ximeno Ave. #25
Long Beach CA 90815 (Cristy Miller??--see
Wi 11 er) Susan Munkres 3016 May Road El Sobrante CA 94803 Jack Miller
4101 Lincoln San Francsico CA 94122 Jeanne Munoz
Kathleen A Miller 4400 Briggs Avenue Montrose CA 91020
Marilou Miller 10884 "A" National Los Ange 1 es CA 9006 4
Laura L Mitchell 19522 Sierra Canon Rd Irvine CA 92715
Kathy Moffitt 3802 E Austin Fresno ·cA 93726
Margaret G Molarsky Box 2 BE Ross, CA 94957
Eric Montizambert 504 Montclair St Bakersfield CA 93309
Brian F Mooney 10 8 7 8 Av i a ry Co u rt San Diego CA 92131
Edna L Moore 160 Kirbyhill ~lay Sunnyvale CA 94087
Jan r, Moore 340 A Rob a 1 o Ridgecrest CA 93555
7159 Coralite St. Long Beach CA 90808
Anton C Musladin 23245 Hutchinson Road Los Gatos CA 95030
Ruth A. Musser P.O Br.x DG Needles CA 92363
N L Ky 1 e Nap ton Californ·ia State Univ
Stanislaus Dept. of Anthropology Turlock CA 95380
Susan Naughton (see listing at end for current address)
Roxanna Neff 122 -2nd Ave , #13 Santa Cruz CA 95062
Dan Nelson 2108 Mendota \iay San Jose CA 95122
Ruth Nelson 2160 Loyola Way Tu r1 ock CA 953 80
Sally Newel 1 4122 Morning Star Dr Huntinston Beach CA
92649
Claudia Nissley 523· W Aspen Flagstaff AZ 86001
Anna C Noah 4230 - 42nd Street San Diego CA 92105
Caryl Noble 3131 Serra Way Sacramento CA 95816
0 Albert C Oetting 1795 Woodside r.c,·,rt con ca ra- ··c A-9-4519--
Janis Offermann 826 Fifth Street Woodland CA 95695
Patricia M Ogrey 26729 Contessa St Hayward CA 94545
Nancy H Olsen 731 Ashbourne Drive Sunnyvale CA 94087
Pat Olson 1301 Smoke Tree Las Vegas NV 89108
Richard V Olson P O Box 588 Wes two o d , CA 9 6 13 7
Dennis H O Neil Archaeo l ogical Certi
fication Program Palomar College San Marcos CA 92069
Karin O N.eil 723 E Griffith Fresno, CA 93704
Thomas M. Origer P 0. Box 884 Cotati CA 94928
Robert Orl ins 39 - ls t Street Woodland CA 95695
Phil G Orr Western Speleological
Institute, Inc 79 7 Ash 1 ey Road Santa Barbara CA 93103
Joan Oxendine PO Box 10 Murrieta CA 92362
p
Elizabeth F Padon 3285 Sepulveda Blvd Los Angeles, CA 90034
18
Gary W Pahl Dept of Anthropology San Francis~o State
Uni ve rs i ty 16 0 O H o 11 ow ay San Francisco CA 94132
Carol J Panlaqui 2 2 9 N Brady Ridgecrest, CA 93555
Charles Pansarosa 1730 Fountain Way Fresno, CA 93705
Craig Parada Planning Department City of San Jose 151 West Mission St. San Jose CA 95110
John W' .. Par ker -p O Box 3756 Clearlake Highlands
CA 95422
E B reek Parkman 26609 #204 Gading Rd Hayward, CA 94544
Al Pastron 114 Wi 1 ding Lane Oikland CA 94618
Dorothy A Patch 400-B Dolores St Santa Cruz CA 95062
Kevin D. Paulsen 13130 Acoro Place Cerritos CA 90701
Billy J 4222 W
Suite Fresno,
Pe ck Alamos 206 CA 93711
Robert L Pence Dept of Anthropology Pierce College 6201 Winnetka Ave Woodland Hills CA
91364
Michael W Pendleton 310 Ponderosa Way Magalia CA 95954
Ji 11 Petersen 18187 Bryce Court Fountain Valley CA
92708
Roy Pettus 1068 Tourmaline Drive San Diego CA 92109
George Phebus, Jr Processing Lab MNH-311 Dept. of Anthropology Smithsonian Institution Washington DC 20560
·Art Pheland PO Box 1657 Fort Bragg CA 95437
• Lorna C Pierce 9 9 9 C a pi t o 1 a W ay Santa Clara CA 95051
•
Jo Ann Pike 27961 Palos Verdes Dr Rolling Hills CA
90274
Arno 1 d R. Pi 11 in g Dept of Anthropology Wayne State Univ Detroit MI 48202
H Keith Polan 3343 Vancouver Ave .
----- sari -·Diego ·-cA- 92104
B a rb a r a L Pol c en e 1025 Vi a Nuevo Riverside CA 92507
Michael R Polk 444 N Irby Lane #238 Irving TX 75061
Cris D Porter 3145 Ridact Napa CA 94558
Garth J 22 78 N Bishop
Portillo Sierra Hwy CA 93514
Deborah D Powell PO Box 716 Madera CA 93639
Adrian Praetzellis 705 Madison Santa Rosa CA 95401
Mary Praetzellis 705 Madison Santa Rosa CA 95401
Barry Price 135 Harbor Ori ve Novato CA 9494 7
Jack Prichett 1541\ Bancroft Ave Berkeley CA 94703
Martha V Proctor PO Box 1734 Bishop CA 93514
R
Yusuf Rahman 233\ Market St Venice, CA 90291
.Georgia Raidy P O Box 70 8 Topanga CA 90290
Jan Rawlinson 7444 Bridget Dr. #29 Rohnert Park CA
94928
Robert Rech tman 22834 Ostronic Dr Woodland Hills CA
91363
Chandra L Reedy 691 Levering Ave
Apt 16 Los Angeles CA 90024
Robert W Reese 2211 Garden Road Monterey CA 9 39 40
Gary L Reinoehl 1802 SE 176 Portland OR 97233
Jo Rodgers 43048 Everglades Park
Ori ve Fremont CA 94536
Russell G Rohlen P O Box 472 San Matec. CA 94401
Kay Rolfe 1362 Foothill Road Ojai, CA 93023
Michael F Rondeau 1728 Rock Rose Road West Sacramento CA
95691
Priscilla Reuter 109 s-sun- Road·- ·
William G Roop 661 Olive Avenue
- Nova to- --cA-94-9Tr McKinleyville, CA
95521
Lee M. Rhoads, Jr 20044 Valley View Topanga CA 9b290
Mariel Richards 724 N 6th Lompoc, CA 93436
Francis A. Riddell 9017 Feather River Way Sacramento CA 95826
Eric W. Ritter 1115 Le Conte Drive Riverside CA 92507
Betty Rivers 1316 Fig Place Davis CA 95616
Lynn Robb 216 Pier Avenue Santa Monica CA 90405
Lenny Roberts 1362 Foothi 11 Road Ojai CA 93023
Victoria Roberts Native American Heritage
Commission 1400 Tenth Street Sacramento CA 95814
Phyllis J Robertson 114 E. San Gabriel 1 San Clemente CA 92672
Roger W Robinson 4812 West M-4 Quartz Hill CA 93534
James T Rock 418 S Oregon Street Yreka CA 96097
George P Rodger·s 43048 Everglades Park
Ori ve Fremont, CA 94538
19
Paula E Rosa 351 Jefferson Pocatello Idaho 83201
James Roscoe 1761 "H" Street Eureka CA 95501
Martin D Rosen 7555 Volclay Drive San Diego CA 92119
E Jane Rosenthal 13292 Yockey #12 Garden Grove CA 92644
Fred Ross 2410 Mt Pleasant Rd. San Jose CA 95148
James H Roy l e , Jr 2325 Loring Street San Diego CA 92109
Charles E Rozaire 900 W Exposition Blvd Los Angeles, CA 90007
Eliza Russo P O Box 2793 Pasadena CA 91105
Marianne L Russo 2608 Herkness St Sacramento CA 95818
James S Rutherford 161 E Portola Avenue Los Altos CA 94022
Mary Ellen Ryan 320 Towhee Drive Santa Cruz CA 95060
s Jean A Sal pas 1005 Vi a Zapata, #101 Riverside CA 92507
Sa ly Sal man 1435 Carlos Avenue Burlingame CA 94010
Michael P Sa~pson NW 902 Charlotte Pullman WA 99163
Susan Sapone 325 Chestnut, #4 Carlsbad CA 92008
Michael J Sawyer 20558 Meekland Ave Hayward CA 94541
William Sawye;,-3813 S Sycamore Santa Ana~ CA 92707
Robert A Schiffman Dept of Anthropology Bakersfield College 1801 Panorama Drive
-B-alersfTeTcr~ cA- ·n30 5· - ---
Mary Scf,nei der 2313-A Oak Street Santa Monica CA 90405
Al an R. Schroedl Dept. of Anthropology California State Univ Fresno CA 93740
Adell a Schroth 215 S Florette Anaheim CA 92804
Paul J F Schumacher 200 Pinehill Road Hillsborough CA 94010
Terry Schuster 238 Liberty Street Petaluma CA 94952
Robert L Schuyler University Museum University of Pennsylvania 33rd & Spruce Streets Philadelphia PA 19104
Rae Schwaderer P O Box 994 Cotati CA 94928
Steven Schwartz 3235 E 15th St , Apt. 7 Long Beach CA 90804
Evelyn Seelinger PO Drawer r; Silver City NV 89428
Linda Sehgal 17239 San Fernando
Mission Boulevard Granada Hills CA 91344
William C Seidel 2632 Rochon Way Sacramento CA 95818
Jo-Lee Semenza 454 Mission St. #8 South Pasadena CA 91030
Gail Seward 6291 Sierra Siena Rd Irvine CA 92715
M. Steven Shackley n344 Brighton Ave Sln Diego CA 92107
William Shapiro 1017 Arcadian Ave Chico, CA 95926
Carolyn A Shepherd 492 N Warner Ridgecrest CA 93555
Mary Shepperd 970 Meridian #79 San Jose CA 95126
Cindy L Smith 2545 E Earll Dr Phoenix AZ 85015
Gerald A Smith Di rectu ·,·
San Bernardino County Museum Association
2024 Orange Tree LanE Redlands CA 92373
H~len C Smi th 260 Brentwood St Costa Mesa CA 92627
J Christ.i1,a Smith 1128 Sutter St San Diego CA 92103
Judy Smith Tara- L. · She1Werson" - - - -- rst2 spruce /tve. - - -- · Dept. of Anthropology Chi co CA 95926 Univ of Nevada
Las Ve gas 450? S Maryland Pkwy Las Vegas NV 89 154
Roy J Shlemon PO Box 3066 Newport Beach CA 92663
Katryn R. Shumway 1590 Oriole Aven ue Sunnyvale, CA 9ij0~7
Diane Simon 23335 Friar St Woodland Hills CA
91367
Joseph J Si man 23335 Friar St WoodlandHills CA
91367
Patty Simon 23335 Friar St Woodland Hills CA
11367
Clay A. Si n ge r 726 Copeland Court Santa Monica CA 90405
Cathleen M. Sinkay 12 3 3 E He n ry S t . 11 B II
Tempe, AZ 85281
Cynthia Skinner 2340 12th Ave San Francisco CA
94116
Crandolyn D Smith 22041 Lostine Av€ Carson CA 90745
Charlotte A. Smith P O. Box 544 Ben Lomond CA 95005
Chuck Smith 340 8th Avenue Santa C,..,,_, CA 95062
Mary H Smith 388 Carrera Drive Mill Valley CA 94941
Nolan W Smi th 401 Factory St reet Nevada City CA 95959
Pandora E Snethk amp SPRI-UCSB Santa Barbara CA 93106
LeRoy Snyder Jr .. 1457 W Browning Fresno CA 93711
Laurence W Spanne 250 San Pasqual Road Lompoc CA 93436
Eiieen Spencer Rt 1, Box 6465 Red Bluff CA 96080
Nancy M. Spencer 711 W Cit r on St Corona CA 91720
G A. Spire 650 Pier Avenue Santa Monica CA 90405
Michele L Stam 704 Granite Street Pacific Grove CA 93950
Jason Stanley 307 Cherry Avenue Capitola CA 95010
Jeri A. Starkweather 3509 N Maple Fresno CA 93726
Jean M Stein 2928 Hillegass Berkeley CA 94705
Eugene A. Stelzer 215 N I.a Sena Ave West Covina CA 91790
Gary L Stetzel 2309 Natchez Avenue Placentia, CA 92670
Dennis W Stevens PO Box 134 Challenge CA 95925
Yvonne G Stewart Wes tern Archaeological
Cen te r PO Rox 49008 Tues on AZ 857 15
Gloria Stillians 3603 W 147th Street Hawthorne CA 90250
Robert A Stillinger 802 Denman Road, #9 Penngrove- ·-cA"-g-4-9-s-1-
Donal d J Storm PO Box 552 Oregon House CA 95962
Richard A Stradford PO Box 835 Cotati CA 94928
Wendell Straha n PO Box 624 Mojave, CA 93501
W.L.C Sulzner 117 Felix Sant a Cruz CA 95060
Martha Sullenberger 605 S 12th, #7 Mon trose CO 81401
Elaine M. Sundahl P O Box 278 Summit City CA 96089
Mark Q Sutten 831 Barstow Road Barstow CA 92311
Paul a A_ Sutton P O Box 1123 Truckee CA 95734
T Jean Tadlock 135 S Myrtle Avenue Tus tin CA 92680
W Lewis Tadlock 135 S Myrtle Avenue Tustin CA 92680
Sonia Tamez 241 S Cloverleaf Porterville CA 93257
Todd Tatum 341 -23rd St Santa Monica CA 90402
Clifford V F Taylor PO Box 99239 San Diego CA 92 109
20
Thomas T Taylor 941 S Claudina Anaheim CA 92805
R. E Taylor Dept of Anthropology University of California Riverside, CA 92521
Faye Teach Rt 2 Box 406 Cottonwood CA 96022
Dorothea Theodoratus TCR/8033 Sunset Fair Oaks CA 95628
Donald R. Thieler 6 Arli~gton Court ~_?~·-~to ~ CA _9_4_9_4_7 __ _
Buzz Thunen 333 Ramona Avenue Piedmont CA 94611
Denise E Tillar 66 W 94th Street New York NY 10025
Donna Todd 11259 La Maida North Hol lywood CA
91601
Susan S Toll P O Box 66 Silver City, NV 89428
Karen Toor Star Route Taylorsville CA 95983
Jan Townsend 2512 Carmel Valley Road Del Mar CA 92014
Donald R. Tuohy Nevada State Museum Capitol Complex Carson City NV 89710
u Sancra Uchitel 11908 Ocean Park Blvd Los Angeles CA 90064
Jackson Underwood 811 Jamaica Court San Diego CA 92109
Kathleen S 2528 Dana Berkeley
v
Uno #4
CA 94704
Justine Vacca 428 King Street Santa Cruz CA 95060
Thad M. Van Bueren 1773 Terrace Drive Belmont , CA 94002
W,en dy V-an Ou sen 1707 Spring Hill Rd Petaluma CA 94952
Sylvia Brakke Vane 823 Valparaiso Ave Menlo Park, CA 94025
Dudley M. Varner 1033-A E Barstow Fresno CA 9 3 710
Jeannie C Villanueva 2725 Fisk Lane Redondo Beach CA 90278
w Kurt Wal lof PO Box 701 Vi rgi n i a- Ci ty - NV -89 440
Gwen J Walter 7630 Hi 11 Road Roseville CA 95678
Nancy P Walter 17048 Sunburst Northridge CA 91325
Dennis L Wardell 310 Lighthouse Ave Pacific Grove CA 93950
G. Frederick Warn 3605 Trenton Ave San Diego, CA 92117
Gary R. Warner 825-A South Pacific Oceanside CA 92054
Doris M. Watson 464 Tennessee Lane Palo Alto CA 94306
Diane C Watts 4624 Do lores Avenue Oakland CA 94602
Richard Weaver 1433 Lazy A Drive Bishop CA 93514
Priscilla Wegars P O Box 890 Moscow 10 83843
Lawrence E Weigel P O Box 115 Bridgeville CA 95526
Edward 8 Weil Oept of Anthropo-logy California State Univ r.ominguez Hills Carson CA 90747
Gay weinberger 16210 Mustang Drive Porterville CA 93257
Marshall I Weisler 222 Kaimuohema Place Honolulu HI 96817
Michael A Wendorf Dept . of Anthropolo3y Uni v of Cal i f o rn i a Berkeley CA 94720
Roger Werner - Box--3 r2 1 --- -
Clearlake Highlands CA 95422
Richard L Wessel 7518 Baird Avenue Reseda CA 91335
James West 420 "J" Street Davis CA 9 56 16
Nan cy Wey 466 South 5th St., #2 San Jose CA 95112
Kenneth W Whistler (see listing at bottom of next page)
Chris White 4352 Marlborough, #6 San Diego CA. 92105
LesterO White 118 S Alpine St Willows CA 95988
Christina Whitley 11974~ Idaho Avenue Los Angeles CA 90025
David S Whitley Ancient Enterprises PO Box 5138 Santa Monica CA 90406
Doug Whitley 11974~ Idaho Ave Los Angeles CA 90025
Edgar D Whitley 180 9 Hi 1 1 St Santa Moni ca CA 90405
Theresa C Whitley 440 Raymond Ave #10 Santa Monic a CA 90405
Yvonne R Whitley 1809 Hil .1 St Santa Monica, CA 90405
Jan Whitlow 396 W San Fer:nando San Jose, CA 95110
Daniel D Whitney Gallatin & Whitney 2441 "E" Street _ San _ Diego, CA 92101
Brian P Wickstrom P O Box 276 Hilmar CA 95324
Jay C Wiese 485 Lily Ann Way San Jose CA 95123
Mary Ellen Wigno Rt 1, Box 583 Red Bluff CA 96080
William S Wihr 1591 Treat Avenue San Francisco, CA 94110
Larry Dept Univ Santa
R. Wil co xon of Anthropol ogy of California Barbara CA 93106
Ramona R Williamson 6879 Sandy Lane Arlington, CA 92505
Cr i s ty W i 1 l er 2218-A Prince St Berkeley CA 94705
Cha rlotte M. Willits 3346 Kansas Avenue Riverside CA 92507
Kenneth L Wilson PO Box 7 Ca rmichael CA 95608
Sonja I Wilson 1636 Barstow Clovis CA 93612
IMS TI TUTI ONAL t'.1EM3ERS
Joseph C Wir;iter Office of Co ntract
Archaeology Univ of New Mexico Albuquerque NM 87131
Marcia V V Wire 15533 Kavin Lane Monte Sereno, CA 95030
Carol K, Witte 1442 Cameo Drive Tustin CA 92680
Matthew B Wlodarski 1601 West Gage Ave Fullerton CA 92633
Eric Wohlgemuth 647 Coronado St. ReodTng CA- 96003
Eric J Wolfe 10929 Rome Beauty Dr Ca lifornia Ci t y , CA
9 3505
Olive Wollesen Box 184 Lockwood CA 93932
Alice Wood 470 "B" 62nd St Oakland, CA 94618
Mike Woods 1630-E Los Altos Fresno CA 93710
Jim Woodward 3070 Boeing Taxiway Shingle Springs CA
9 5682
Donald G Wren 1131 E Indianapolis Fresno CA 93704
y
Andrew Yatsko III Rt. 2 Box 78 Chico CA95926
z Nadine Zelenka PO Box 11084 Costa Mesa, CA 92627
American Pacific Environmental Co nsul tan ts Inc
Archaeological Consulting & Res ea rch Services, Inc
1838 Pine Flat Road
Burea u of Land Management 831 Barstow Road
125 W Mission Avenue Es condido CA 92025
Anthropology Laboratory Dept. of ~nthropology Calif. State Univ Sonoma 1801 E Cotati Ave Rohnert Park CA ~492 8
Sa nta Cruz CA 90060
Archaeological Survey Assn of Southern California Inc
P O Box 516 La Verne CA 91750
21
Barstow CA 92311
Bureau of Land Management 333 S Waterman Avenue El Centro CA 92243
Bureau of Land Management 1695 Spruce St Riverside CA 92507
Bu re au o f Land Man age men t 2800 Cottage Way Sacramento CA 95825
Cabrillo College Library 6500 Soquel Drive Aptos CA 9 500 3
Periodicals Section Cal i fo rn i a St ate Li b r a ry P ·o. Box 2037 Sacramento CA 95809
County Museum County of San Bernardino 2024 Orange Tree Lane Redlands CA 92373
History Preservation Section Dept of Parks & Recreation PO Box 2390 Sacramento, CA 95811
Dept of Transportat~on Environmental Branch P O Box 2048 Stockton CA 95201
Dept of Transportation P O Bos 81406 (Library) San Diego, CA 92138 _ Jhe._EdLt_o_r ___ _ ___ _
Californians for Preservation Action
P O Box 2169 Sacramento CA 958i0
-------- ---- · - -- --- ·- - -- --,,.
Cleveland National Forest 850 Front St San Diego CA 92188
Colorado River Indian Tribes Museum
Charles Lamb Director Route 1 Box 23-B Parker -Az 85344
Eastern California Museu-m PO Box 206 Independence CA 93526
Editor Field Notes Arkansas Archaeological Soc University Museum University of Arkansas Fayetteville AR 72701
ADD I TI ONAL ME~IB ERS
Foundation for Illinois Archeology
Attn Dr Stuart Struever PO Box 1499 Evanston IL 60204
Allan Hancock College Library 800 S College Drive Santa Maria CA 93454
Kern County Archaeological Society Box 6743 Bakersfield CA 93306
History Division Los Angeles Public Library 630 West Fifth St, Los Angeles CA 90071
Los Padres National Forest 42 Aero Camino Goleta CA 93017
West Valley College Library 14000 Fruitvale Avenue Saratoga CA 95070
NOTE: Addr.esses of the following members were received after the list of Individual Members had been typed:
Renee Amato 5855 State University
Drive #lOOA Long Beach CA 90815
R S Brown 11303 Milano Norwalk CA 90650 .
Anne M. Carlson 10763 Butte View Dr. Grass Valley CA 95945
James H Cleland 615 Starbright Lane Alpine CA 92001
Julia G Costello 20685 Gaughan Court Soulsbyville CA 95372
C. Michael Elling 2447 B Russell St Berkeley CA 94705
Gordon L Grosscup 649 Canfield West Detroit MI 48201
Howard A Gard 6525 El Colegio Road #222 Isla Vista, CA 93017
Jean Giunta 1111 South Coast Dr. 0-202 Costa Mesa, CA 92626
Doug Halley 2685-A Mattison Lane Santa Cruz CA 95062
;1arsha L Haney 421 McCreary Drive Hanford CA 93230
Barbara Johnston 1152 Cherry Ave San Jose CA 95125
Michar:l K. Learch 822 Birch Court Redlands CA 92373
Donna Little 20927 Amie Ave , Apt 4 Torrance CA 90503
Susan Naughton Woodward Clyde Consultants 3 Embarcadero Center,#700 San Francisco CA 94114
22
Helen Llorandi 4228 58th St San Diego CA 92115
David B Rafeedie 5181 Audrey Drive Huntington Beach
CA 92649
Richard L Reynolds Research Asst
George C. Page Museum 5801 Wilshire Blvd Los Angeles CA 90036
Catherine J Smith 9841 Tujunga Cyn Pl Tujunga CA 91042
Trudy Vaughan Box 258 Central Val 1 ey CA 96019
Susan Weiler 1146 West Rialto Fresno CA 93705
Kenneth W Whistler c/o National Anthropology Archives Smithsonian NHB 152 Washington CC 20560
(OCT. 24 EXECUTIVE BOARD MINUTES, cont---)~
MEHINGS : The Northern Data Sharing Meeting was successful and realized a profit of $22 to the Society The Southern Data Sharing Meeting will be held tomorrow (25) at Northridge; abstracts are available and there will be an evening party at Nancy Walters The 1981 Annual Meeting is being handled by Erle Montizambert and Bob Schiffman in Bakersfield We have received a formal invitation to hold the 1982 Annual Meeting in Sacramento with John Foster as program director and Dave Abrams as local arrange ments chairman Ron May moved that we accept the invitation; Chuck James seconded Passed unanimously
ELECTIONS: Keith Dixon has accepted Linda s invitation to be chairman of the Nominations Committee
The next meeting wi 11 be January 17 in,. Bakersfield Ron May moved we adjourn the meeting; James seconded Passed unanimously Adjourned 12:45
(0 Respectfully submit ted
JANE ~OS~NTHAL Secretary
SOCIETY for CALIFORNIA ARCHAEOLOGY
The Society for California Archaeology Inc is a non profit scientific and educational organization dedicated to promoting the
------ -i-n-terests of -California archaeo-1-ogy---All DIRECTORY: The Board unanimously approved statements in the Newsletter published five the application of M_ Rondeau as recommended times a ·year do not necessarily reflect by K Johnson The Board, upon Rons the opi nion of the SCA unless said statements recommendation moved to accept G Weinberg are signed by the Society s President and as qualified for the Directory for rock art; Executive Committee All other statements are Kaldenberg seconded; passed unanimously the opinions of the Editorial Staff or of the
person(s) and/or organizations whose name appears below each stagemenl ETHICS PROCEDURES: Linda King on Sept 22
requested that Russ undertake to assemble an ethics grievance committee for the Hillsdale Ave Site Russ accepted and will proceed to assemble a committee
Temp ora ry adjournment 9:55; reconvened 10:08 Ethics continued: The Board continued to discuss the Hillsdale Ave grievance procedures with clarification by Dan Whitney At 10:30 the Board went into Executive Session Executive Session ended at 11:50
NATIVE AMERICAN COMMITTEE: Laidlaw reports that the committee is being assemb led Ron will report on this matter at the next meeting
NEW MELONES: Ron moved that we authorize $500 to Mike Glassow for expenses incurred while chairing the New Melones Committee Kaldenberg seconded; passed unani mous ly Paul Chace noted that this was an important point in SCA history Russ commented that 1 3 million dollars was recently allocated to Heritage Conservation & Recreation Service to continue New Melones research
UNDERWATER ARCHAEOLOGY: Ron had been unable to contact Pat Masters Linda will contact Travis Hudson
MEMBERSHIP: The forms are now ready and ~uss wi 11 make arrangements for distribution
The Board went into Executive Session at 12:27 to discuss the Harrington Award The Board went out of Executive Session at 12:32
NEW BUSINESS : Linda King will write a letter supporting the significance of Bear Creek Windmiller complex site and will request information from Bill Olsen_ District Clearinghouse problems will be addressed at the Southern Data Sharing Meeting Ron May indicated that SCA concern about alteration to CEQA removi ng the archaeological procedurEes should be addressed to Pete Jaccone Russ requested that we support an American Institute of Archaeology meeting on California Archaeology to be held in San Diego Feb 20 The Board agreed
EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE
President: Linda King Dept of Anthropology West Valley College 14000 Fruitvale Ave Saratoga, CA 95070
Vice-President,___Southern California: Ronald V May, 6044 Estel le St San Diego CA 92115
Vice President, Northern California: Jeff Bingham 2450 Wosiqua Lane, Penryn CA 95663
President-Elect: Russell L Kaldenberg 1695 Spruce St Riverside CA 92507
Secret~: Jane Rosenthal 1329 2 Yockey #12 Garden Grove CA 92644
Treasurer: Jane Gothold, 10121 Pounds Ave Whittier CA 90503
EDITORIAL STAFF Editor: Marcia Wire 15533 Kavin Lane Monte
Sereno, CA 95030
REGIONAL EDITORS San Diego: Ron May 6044 Estelle St
CA 92115 San Diego
California Deseri;: Russ Kaldenberg 1995 Spruce St R1vers1de, CA 92507
Southern Coast: Ronald D Douglas Archaeological Planning Collaborative 500 Newport Center Ori ve Suite 525, Newport Beach CA 92660
South Central Coast: Robert L Hoover, Social Sciences Dep-t--California Polytechnic State University San Luis Obispo CA 93407
Bay Area: Farallones Collective, 2914 California St., #1, Sar. Francsi co CA 94115; or 26609 Gadi ng Ro~d #204 Hayward CA 94544.
Other Regions: Vacant--please apply to editor
ASSOCIATE EDITORS
Historic Archaeology: Paul J F Schumacher 200 Pinehill Road Hillsborough CA 94010
BUSINESS OFFICE
Manager: Gale Chapman SCA Business Office c/o Dept of Anthropology California State University Full erton CA 92635
MEMBERSHIP Regular $15 Student $6 Institutional $20/year
23
~OCIETY FOR CALIFORNIA ARCHAEOLOGY Depart~ent of Anthr?polo~y cal i f o rn i a St ate l!n 1 ve rs 1 ty Fullerton CP 92634
Contents
SCA NEWS
El ections Annual Meeting Clearirighouse Update New Business Mgr Native American Comm Minutes of Oct 24 Membership List 1980 Officers N/L Staff
NEWS & CURRENT FESEARCH
General News Report f rom the
Desert. Calen dar Books Journal
1 1-2 11 - 12 s 12 12 23 13-22 23
2 -5
6-10 2 2 ,s 10
NON-PROFIT ' ORG U.S. POSTAGE
PAID Permit No 31 CAMPBELL,. CA