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Keyword: chumashtribe

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  • Sharks and the Chumash : Santa Barbara's First People Relied Heavily on Our Finned Friends

    08/17/2008 3:00:35 PM PDT · by SunkenCiv · 9 replies · 93+ views
    Independent ^ | Thursday, August 14, 2008 | Matt Kettmann
    According to the archaeological record, sharks (and rays, their close relative) were the number two source of protein for coastal Chumash after sardines, at least for the past 1,000 or so years... Specifically, the coastal Chumash were eating the easier-to-catch near-shore species such as leopard shark, angel shark, soupfin shark, and swell shark... The Chumash also ate many species of rays, but seemed to prefer the shovelnose guitarfish, which is wide like a ray in its torso but lanky and finned like a shark on the tail... The guitarfish, like other small sharks and rays, lives part of its life...
  • Archaeologist Dig May Have Found Chumash Home Foundation

    02/11/2008 3:05:40 PM PST · by blam · 4 replies · 97+ views
    San Jose Mercury ^ | 2-11-2008
    Archaeologist dig may have found Chumash home foundation The Associated Press Article Launched: 02/11/2008 05:28:15 AM PST SANTA BARBARA, Calif.—Archaeologists digging in a garden at the Santa Barbara Mission may have unearthed the complete stone foundation of a Chumash house. The dig is expected to be completed Wednesday under the watchful eyes of American Indian representatives. The foundation of the home is believed to be part of what's left of a Chumash village at the site, which is at the northeastern edge of an Indian pueblo at the mission. Much of the village remains were destroyed over the years. In...
  • 13,000-Year-Old Bones Found Near SoCal Coast Could Rewrite Human History

    07/07/2026 1:04:43 PM PDT · by nickcarraway · 46 replies
    New York Post ^ | July 7, 2026 | Ross O'Keefe
    Findings from a mysterious remote chain of islands off the coast of California are rattling bones in the science community as bone-pickers find traces of a “vanished world.” The Golden State’s Channel Islands, located several miles off the SoCal coast, are home to the remnants of revelational lost civilizations intriguing enough to make Indiana Jones blush. A banner finding in the area has been the 13,000-year-old remains of the “Arlington Springs Man,” the earliest dated adult found on the continent. A new documentary highlighted the extraordinary discovery, which has changed science’s thinking around where and when humans first migrated to...