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Society for California Archaeology 2010 Annual Meeting

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80 <strong>Society</strong> <strong>for</strong> Cali<strong>for</strong>nia <strong>Archaeology</strong> <strong>Annual</strong> <strong>Meeting</strong> <strong>2010</strong><br />

changing patterns of human resource exploitation at this location within the context of changing<br />

environmental, social, and political conditions.<br />

JOHNCK, Ellen<br />

Consulting Archaeologist<br />

The South Bay Salt Pond Restoration Project: A Cultural Landscape Approach to the<br />

Resource Management Plan<br />

• General Session 8 (Arlington); Saturday, 9:45 AM<br />

The salt ponds and levees of southern San Francisco Bay are a culturally significant landscape<br />

wherein culture and nature have been linked over 150 years of industrial salt production through<br />

solar evaporation in an extensive wetland ecosystem. This 15,200-acre landscape is the subject<br />

of the South Bay Salt Pond Restoration Project. A cultural landscape analysis can be used in the<br />

Restoration Project to document the landscape's cultural resources; develop a heritage tourism<br />

plan; and establish a basis <strong>for</strong> justifying the landscape's cultural significance and potential<br />

eligibililty <strong>for</strong> listing on the National Register of Historic Places.<br />

JOHNSON, Danette<br />

Southern Sierra Miwuk Nation GIS<br />

see GASKELL, Sandra<br />

JOHNSON, Lynn<br />

Epsilon Systems Solutions, Inc.<br />

Native People’s Response to Cultural Disruption in the Etcharren Valley Uplands be<strong>for</strong>e<br />

the Naval Air Weapons Station (NAWS), China Lake<br />

• Symposium 9 (De Anza North); Friday, 2:15 PM<br />

Ethnohistoric and historic-period archaeological sites were recently identified during surveys<br />

conducted in the Etcharren Valley uplands of the North Range Complex of NAWS China Lake.<br />

Artifact assemblages and features provide insights to how Native people responded to disruption<br />

of traditional lifeways after 1860. In<strong>for</strong>mation from oral histories, consultant interviews, and<br />

archival research provides additional context, revealing how some individuals responded to the<br />

disruption by adopting a mixed strategy that included animal husbandry, horticulture, mining,<br />

and traditional economic pursuits, as well as integration into the Euro-American wage labor<br />

economy. This research also provides a context <strong>for</strong> ethnohistoric and historic-period land-use in<br />

the study area prior to the establishment of NAWS.<br />

JONES, Gary<br />

Department of Anthropology, Cali<strong>for</strong>nia State University at Fullerton<br />

see JAMES, Steven R.<br />

JONES, Terry L.<br />

Cal Poly San Luis Obispo<br />

BOHR, Gregory S.<br />

Cal Poly San Luis Obispo, ,<br />

YORK, Andrew<br />

AECOM, San Diego<br />

ALLEN, Mark W.

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