Abstract

We provide detailed contextual information on 25 14 C dates for unusually well-preserved archaeological and paleontological remains from Daisy Cave. Paleontological materials, including faunal and floral remains, have been recovered from deposits spanning roughly the past 16,000 yr, while archaeological materials date back to ca. 10,500 BP. Multidisciplinary investigations at the site provide a detailed record of environmental and cultural changes on San Miguel Island during this time period. This record includes evidence for the local or regional extinction of a number of animal species, as well as some of the earliest evidence for the human use of boats and other maritime activities in the Americas. Data from Daisy Cave contribute to a growing body of evidence that Paleoindians had adapted to a wide variety of New World environments prior to 10,000 PB. Analysis of shell-charcoal pairs, along with isotopic analysis of associated marine shells, supports the general validity of marine shell dating, but also provides evidence for temporal fluctuations in the reservoir effect within the Santa Barbara Channel region.

Keywords

CaveChronologyArchaeologyRadiocarbon datingGeologyMegafaunaPaleontologyPeriod (music)Archaeological recordGeographyPleistocene

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Year
1996
Type
article
Volume
38
Issue
2
Pages
355-373
Citations
165
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Jon M. Erlandson, Douglas J. Kennett, B. Lynn Ingram et al. (1996). An Archaeological and Paleontological Chronology for Daisy Cave (CA-SMI-261), San Miguel Island, California. Radiocarbon , 38 (2) , 355-373. https://doi.org/10.1017/s0033822200017689

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DOI
10.1017/s0033822200017689