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La Jolla complex

Coordinates:32°37′41″N116°00′11″W / 32.628°N 116.003°W /32.628; -116.003
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Prehistoric culture in southwestern California and northwestern Baja California
La Jolla Complex
HorizonMillingstone Horizon
Geographical rangeSouthwestern California, NorthwesternBaja California
PeriodMiddleHolocene
Datesc. 8000 BC to AD 500
Type siteLa Jolla, California
Major sitesLa Jolla
Preceded bySan Dieguito complex
Followed byCampbell tradition (northern reaches)
Defined byMalcolm J. Rogers

The archaeologicalLa Jolla complex (Shell Midden People, Encinitas Tradition, Millingstone Horizon) represents a prehistoric culture oriented toward coastal resources that prevailed during the middleHolocene period between c. 8000 BC and AD 500 in southwesternCalifornia and northwesternBaja California.

Description

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Characteristics of the La Jolla complex include hand stones and basin or slab milling stones (manos andmetates), rough percussion-flaked stone edge tools,flexed burials, and extensive exploitation of shellfish, particularly venus clam (Chione spp.), scallop (Argopecten aequisulcatus), mussel (Mytilus californianus), and oyster (Ostrea lurida). Cogged stones and discoidals are distinctive but unusual artifacts. Other uncommon artifacts include shell ornaments (primarily spire-removedOlivella spp. beads) and projectile points (Pinto, Gypsum, and Elko forms). Bones from sea mammals and fish occur in La Jollan middens, but they are not abundant. Fish remains usually represent near-shore species, pointing to a littoral rather than maritime economy.

The La Jolla complex was initially characterized as the Shell Midden people byMalcolm J. Rogers, the region's pioneering archaeologist. Rogers distinguished successive phases for the complex. Subsequent investigators have sometimes proposed modified versions of Rogers' phase sequence, but the most striking characteristics of the complex may be its comparatively simple material remains and its long cultural continuity, at least in the San Diego region.Claude N. Warren relabelled the complex as the Encinitas Tradition, which extended as far north as the Santa Barbara Channel region but was replaced by the Campbell tradition in its northern reaches after about 2000 BC. An inland counterpart of the La Jolla complex was the Pauma complex.

Human remains

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Two human skeletons, a male and a female, were found inLa Jolla, California, in 1976; they date back at least 9,500 years. They were found during construction work on a house. They were the subject of a decade-long legal battle.

The University of California decided to return the remains to one of the localKumeyaay Indian bands. This was done in 2016.[1]

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^Kristina Killgrove, Jan 30, 2016 –Two 9,500-Year-Old Skeletons Found At UC San Diego President's House Will Return To Tribes. forbes.com

References

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  • Gallegos, Dennis R. (editor). 1987.San Dieguito-La Jolla: Chronology and Controversy. San Diego County Archaeological Society Research Paper No. 1.
  • Moratto, Michael J. 1984.California Archaeology. Academic Press, Orlando, Florida.
  • Rogers, Malcolm J. 1929. "The Stone Art of the San Dieguito Plateau".American Anthropologist 31:454-467.
  • Rogers, Malcolm J. 1945. "An Outline of Yuman Prehistory".Southwestern Journal of Anthropology 1:167-198.
  • Warren, Claude N. 1968. "Cultural Tradition and Ecological Adaptation on the Southern California Coast". InArchaic Prehistory in the Western United States, edited byCynthia Irwin-Williams, pp. 1–14. Eastern New Mexico University Contributions in Anthropology No. 1(3). Portales.

32°37′41″N116°00′11″W / 32.628°N 116.003°W /32.628; -116.003

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