BajaNomad

Baja Invasion

Osprey - 1-10-2007 at 09:11 AM

Baja Invasion


All of us Bajaphiles complain about the hordes of new vacation visitors and retirees from the north cluttering up our formerly pristine Baja California. In my case it was Vini, Vidi, Velcro, I Came, I Saw, I Stuck Around. We should not complain. We are all Johnny Come Latelies.

New discoveries reveal that island hoppers in boats have been coming here from all over the Pacific rim for the last 40,000 years. 8,000 years ago it was like Easter Week here. Lots of vacationers in love with the sealife found the seas full of good things to eat, the climate moderate, no time share PC guys and gals pulling their sleeves.

I think most of these early visitors came just as the mammoths, camelids, sloths, etc. of the Ice Age were disappearing. I believe there might have been many more deer and antelope but early spring breakers would have had a hard time roundin’ them up to make stew. It is hard to say what riches the seas might have held way back when but if you let your imagination run it will give new meaning to the words “wide open”.

I’ve explored lots of southern Baja beaches and I can say that very few of them do not have evidence of kitchen middens, mounds of shells from shellfish which sustained perhaps hundreds of early tribes of visitors from Kamchatka to Chili.

A couple of miles from my house there is a large, well preserved early man surface site that holds literally thousands of worked hand tools and middens which might be evidence of either large or extended occupation. I think these people were here 4,000 years ago (Mexican Natural History dept. tagged them as Las Palmas Group) because the site is only 5 meters above sea level – 10,000 years ago the sea level might have been 60 or 70 meters higher. Thank God these folks were few and primitive because about that time in history the Albans pushed the walrus to the brink of extinction in the northern seas. Only very recent visitors have had the luxury, the freedom, the permission to loot and pollute this little sea.

3 hand axes.jpg - 38kB

FARASHA - 1-10-2007 at 11:46 AM

Nice and interesting findings Osprey.
I wonder what people will find in some thousands of years from now - OUR trash I guess, buried under concrete. Asking themself - WHY the hell they did it. :?:

David K - 1-10-2007 at 11:49 AM

Nice post Osprey!

Farasha, today's trash is tomorrow's treasures!!!

FARASHA - 1-10-2007 at 11:55 AM

You are probably right David - maybe some petrified pampers are going to be displayed in the Guggenheim??

Cypress - 1-10-2007 at 01:56 PM

Osprey, Thanks for sharing the history.:bounce:

Skeet/Loreto - 1-10-2007 at 03:59 PM

Thanks Osprey:
And I had the opportunity to see some of the Last of the Vagabondos Sailing the Sea of Cortez, just 35 short years ago!!
Skeet/Loreto

Osprey

Baja Bernie - 1-11-2007 at 07:47 AM

It would have been fun to listen as you and Jimmy Smith spoke of such things. I often listened to Don Jimmy expound on things such as these. So many bits and pieces of real Baja knowledge lost when he passed on.

Please keep sharing...................even if it is with your tongue planted firmly in cheek.

Thanks!

abreojos - 1-11-2007 at 08:19 AM

Very clear and interesting point made osprey. We are just a speck in time and now matter what we do, eventually nature will undo it in time!
I sometimes dream about being the only man left on earth along with a couple dozen beautiful young women and it is my job to re-populate the earth! Let you imagine run wild with that idea some time...

vandenberg - 1-11-2007 at 08:50 AM

Quote:
Originally posted by abreojos

I sometimes dream about being the only man left on earth along with a couple dozen beautiful young women and it is my job to re-populate the earth!



And who will get to marry you, unless one of the maidens is ordained.:lol::lol::lol::lol::lol:

abreojos - 1-11-2007 at 09:01 AM

I don't think I will need anyone's permission and I do not see any reason to carry on that tradition. I'd like to explore other possibilities and not pass on possessivness & jellousy. But then again brothers & sisters would have no ther choice but each other. Ok, so we'll divide up the planet into small groups, one on each continient so our kids don't have to marry each other. I'll take Australia and remember Antartica is a contenient...Is there any takers?

Osprey-------

Barry A. - 1-11-2007 at 10:21 AM

----Great post!

I too have wondered and wandered amongst the evidence of the "ancient one's" in Baja. For me, it is especially rewarding and inspiring when I encounter middens on very remote beaches, like the ones north of the BdLA, or sleeping circles and flake scatters upon lonely ridges, and in remote arroyos near the sea, or grinding holes in granite boulders along the base of the Sierra's-----pottery scatters, etc, etc.. I have very little formal training in these matters, but I really get excited when I see such remains-----I just like to look at them, and let my mind wander------linger, and then just walk away, leaving them to rest as they have for centuries.

I am thinking that you are the same.

David K - 1-11-2007 at 10:36 AM

I feel the same way Barry... It is great to visit ancient sites even though most are documented... However, it's really exciting when you find a site that you didn't know about in advance, like this one east of El Socorro...



Don Jimmy was interested in the first inhabitants of Baja Sur, since they were a different race than the rest of the peninsula! Polynesian perhaps?

wilderone - 1-11-2007 at 01:32 PM

I was excited to find that the entire area at Gecko's and along the shoreline/dune/flats areas south of there are littered with scraper tools; and the cliff bank is a midden about a foot thick stretching a good 40 yards. Intact (more or less) as it is, it provides a clear picture of what was for dinner, and the species of shellfish apprently in abundance at the time.
There are so many small habitation sites within Baja, I really doubt that the minor ones are documented. During the LNG construction project in northern Baja, an important artifact/burial discovery was made last year; and another important discovery in the Guadalupe Valley last year or two as well. More and more discoveries come to light as knowledgeable people uncover and report them. Otherwise, they lie in situ for us to ponder.

Taco de Baja - 1-12-2007 at 11:13 AM

Here is a cool article from 2003 on Baja's "Ancient Ones" from the Sept. 6 edition of Science News, Vol 164, No. 10, p. 150.
I may have posted this before, but this is a good place for a repost.

Quote:
Continental Survivors: Baja skulls shake up American ancestry
Bruce Bower

Around 600 years ago, the Pericú people roamed the southern tip of what is now Mexico's Baja peninsula, a finger of land that extends below California. Although the Spanish conquest spelled their demise in the 16th century, the Pericú were living links to America's first settlers, according to a new anthropological study.

Pericú skulls closely resemble 8,000- to-11,000-year-old human skulls unearthed in Brazil, say Rolando González-José of the University of Barcelona, Spain, and his colleagues. The Brazilian skulls look strikingly like those of today's Australian aborigines (SN: 4/7/01, p. 212: http://www.sciencenews.org/20010407/fob1.asp). Moreover, the scientists contend, the data indicate that the Pericú were unrelated to modern Native American and eastern Asian groups.






FACING BACK. Two views (above and below) of a skull from a Baja population that may illuminate the settlement of the Americas.
González-José



These findings support the scientists' theory that both the first Americans, who arrived at least 12,000 years ago, and the first Australians, who showed up down under around 40,000 years ago, have a common root in southern Asia. A second wave of American settlers, the ancestors of present-day Native Americans, immigrated from northeastern Asia a mere several thousand years ago, González-José's group concludes in the Sept. 4 Nature.

That scenario clashes with the traditional view that both the initial and later waves of American settlers came from northeastern Asia.

"Slowly, we are realizing that the ancestry of the Americas is as complex and as difficult to trace as that of other human lineages around the world," comments anthropologist Tom D. Dillehay of the University of Kentucky in Lexington.

González-José and his coworkers compared measurements of 33 Pericú skulls housed at a Mexican museum with those of 22 ancient Brazilian skulls and hundreds of skulls from a worldwide sample of contemporary groups.

The Baja and Brazilian skulls exhibit telling similarities, the investigators say. These include long, narrow braincases and short, thin faces, a pattern akin to that of modern inhabitants of southern Asia and South Pacific islands.

The Pericú and the ancient Brazilians were descendents of America's initial settlers, the scientists propose. After the last ice age ended around 10,000 years ago, they add, the expansion of a desert across the middle of the Baja peninsula isolated the Pericú from other Native American groups.

Some of the continent's first arrivals probably traveled south along the Pacific coast from Alaska to reach the Baja peninsula's southern tip, González-José says. Researchers typically theorize that after trekking through Alaska, the first Americans headed south through an inland ice corridor.

It's still unclear whether the Baja population descended from the continent's ancient settlers or grew to resemble prehistoric Brazilians by virtue of adapting to a New World environment that's similar to Brazil's, Dillehay says.

According to archaeologist David J. Meltzer of Southern Methodist University in Dallas, the next step is to extract DNA from the Baja and Brazilian skulls and determine whether the two groups had close genetic ties. For now, Meltzer remains convinced by skeletal and archaeological evidence that points to Siberia as the homeland of America's first settlers.

References:

Dillehay, T.D. 2003. Tracking the first Americans. Nature 425(Sept. 4):23-24. Available at http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/425023a.

González-José, R., et al. 2003. Craniometric evidence for Palaeoamerican survival in Baja California. Nature 425(Sept. 4):62-65. Abstract available at http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nature01816.

Further Readings:

Bower, B. 2001. Early Brazilians unveil African look. Science News 159(April 7):212. Available at http://www.sciencenews.org/20010407/fob1.asp.

Sources:

Tom D. Dillehay
Department of Anthropology
University of Kentucky
Lexington, KY 40506

Rolando González-José
Universitat de Barcelona
Facultat de Biologia
Secció d'Antropologia
Diagonal 645
08028 Barcelona
Spain

David J. Meltzer
Department of Anthropology
Southern Methodist University
Box 750336
Dallas, TX 752750336

-------------------------------------
Letters:

The multiple-origin theory of ancient New World immigration reported in this article has a long and respectable scholarly history, though it's tarnished from time to time by enthusiasts for one race or another. For an early popular treatment, see Men out of Asia by Harold Sterling Gladwin (1947, McGraw-Hill). Gladwin even mentioned the Pericú, who were cited in the article.

Gene McWhorter
Longview, Texas
-------------------------------------------


Source

FARASHA - 1-12-2007 at 11:30 AM

This thread turns out to be the best - really great info here.
Thanks Osprey and Taco d B

FARASHA - 1-12-2007 at 01:18 PM

BACK to the ROOTS then - for the majority of the BajaNomad's ??!! :yes:

Twi lite zone

Osprey - 1-12-2007 at 02:28 PM

"Imagine if you will....." Take a look at Summanus's chart and imagine the Eskimos to be protoJapanese (today's Ainu from Hokkaido) who came all the way round in boats eating all the good things in the sea and near the shore across the northern Pacific rim, finding themselves at the opening of Vizcaino Bay. They can go west 70 miles to get around the bay and go south or THEY CAN GO INTO THE BAY, FIND THE WHALES AND SEALS AND OTTERS, LIVE THERE WHILE THEY ROAM THE NEARBY MOUNTAINS MAKING CAVE PAINTINGS AND PICTOGRAPHS OF SEA ANIMALS. hhmmmm?

Or..."Name that tune."

Summanus - 1-12-2007 at 04:32 PM

"Row, row, row your boat..." or "Follow the yellow-line road,.. Follow the yellow-line road.." to the land of Baja?

Some of those Asian boat-types may have noticed the huge Pacific waves, storms, crashing surf, and lack of sweet, plentiful, fresh, drinkable..'water'. (definitely pre-Pacifico era)

Brainfart idea #3. Alternative routing for seasickness: Take Asia-North America toll-free landbridge..turn right onto Glacier Route 66..tailgate bison herd south.

Rock painting travel ads back then read: "Picture yourself on an easy stroll through the ice corridor from 'Alaska' to 'Baja'.!"

(...like a lot of us do these days :))

They might follow the migrating herds of food south through the open glacier passes of those by-gone days?..munching nuts, berries, and road-apples along the way?

(..okay, so they probably passed on the road-apples, but I betcha they used them for fuel.)

The southernmost glacier-fleeing nomads then got bottled up in what are now the golf courses of Palm Springs and were forced south by frostbitten nomad newbies.

And that is how Baja came to be.:rolleyes:

- a skeleton-location-map.jpg - 33kB

abreojos - 1-12-2007 at 05:04 PM

I agree, there is a lot of great information shared here and I'll even get aa little serious and share this photo of an museum quality spear and arrowheads found in Abreojos. Thousands have been stolen by Gringo surfers who traded pot to the locals for them and paid for their vacations and drugs by selling them back in the states.
Some of the best were found on my property, a fovorite place for the natives to fish and chip arrow and spearheads.

[Edited on 1-13-2007 by abreojos]

[Edited on 1-13-2007 by abreojos]

018.jpg - 46kB

abreojos - 1-12-2007 at 07:24 PM

That is a photo of stolen points. I got it from a local who helped. He has his own private collection and all of them are better than anything I have seen in San Ignacio, Loreto or La Paz.
That statue is great Summanus. I hope you clobbered that thief really good.

I've seen that before??

Sharksbaja - 1-12-2007 at 07:57 PM

Quote:
Originally posted by Summanus
Excellent point collection, abrejos. We have seen some of those, too. We hope all people will donate their finds to a local museum or create a free public display for all to enjoy.

A old history-buff friend made this stone sculpture of what he thought early Baja man might have looked like. He spent many years traveling in Baja studying their middens and paths. He gave it to me for a special occasion. I prize it highly.

It was stolen once; hence the bruise marks on it's face.
I recovered it; hence the bruise marks on the thief's face.




Have you posted that here before Summanus?

Summanus - 1-12-2007 at 08:18 PM

I may have, sharks. My wife tells me I am somewhat repetitive.

Osprey - 1-12-2007 at 08:20 PM

Just so we don't miss the point, it matters little how the visitors got here -- NOBODY STAYED. If they walked, ran or floated, if they got here about when the cave painting were done, to become the Pericue they would have to stick around for over 6,000 years. I DON'T THINK SO. Cataviña area is pretty but it's not the Imperial Valley and never was. 6,000 year old civilizations are easy to find because they leave behind giant people centers, ruins of people who organized enough to stick it out.

FARASHA - 1-13-2007 at 12:46 PM

:?: So where did they go then? Anybody knows?

Cypress - 1-13-2007 at 02:10 PM

I'm thinking they just rolled with the punches and adapted. They're still there. :bounce::spingrin:

wilderone - 1-16-2007 at 09:59 AM

The Spaniards killed them with disease. It is well documented that 80-90 pecent of a region would by wiped out by disease. Before the Spaniards, there is little known history. There is plenty of evidence to show that mankind lived all over Baja. I find tools, pictographs everywhere. They were no Maya - with stone monuments, etc. - but most of the California indigenous lived in thatched roof homes, were seasonally nomadic. Also, most civilizations are not "pure" - and habitation sites are created, abandoned, re-discovered, re-built, etc. over aeons. The Anasazi were plagued with war and draught - their numbers began to split up as smaller groups began to split off and joined other tribes over a period of time. The same questions can be applied to any ancient culture anywhere in the world. Modern day catastrophe can provide a hint as to what became of some of them - hurricanes, floods, tidal waves, drought - the worthless spent soil in Bangladesh which can no longer support a population resulting in starvation. It is also known that habitants of Baja crossed the gulf, and also traveled up and down the California and Baja coast. The cave on Todos Santos island is (was) full of artifacts suggesting long term habitation, on a seasonal or full time basis.

Iflyfish - 1-16-2007 at 05:43 PM

Fascinating topic. Will read more when internet connection better. Always good to hear from Osprey!

Last year, year before American woman takes over a museum, she used to work with a Coroner in a large metropolitan area. She was wanting to establish the state of the objects when she took over. She ordered tests on the mummies in the collection that were gathered in the 19th century. She by habit ordered a drug screen on the check off list as she had routinely done in the Coroners office not thinking about the results. The results: They found marijuana, tobacco and cocaine in these mummies. Well this caused a great bruha in the History Writers community. Some speculated contamination by workers from the 19th century when people were eating ground mummies as a remedy for various ills.

In the following year another researcher tested a group of mummies gathered in the 18th Century and housed in Germany, I believe. They found the same things.

What do Tobacco, Marijuana and Cocaine all have in common, in addition to their consciousness altering properties? They are all from the New World. There had to have been trade between Egypt and Latin America at some time.

The map posted by Summanas is a really good one. There are in addition others who posit that there was a washing north-south and then back and forth a number of times. Think wave going south and then hitting the end of the continant and then washing back again.

Great Post.

Iflyfish

Iflyfish - 1-16-2007 at 05:46 PM

Osprey,

I personaly will migrate south and then back north. You are right at least about some of us.

Iflyfishwhenotpondering

Iflyfish - 1-16-2007 at 05:47 PM

P.S. Nomads, I don't intend to leave my skull.

Iflyfish

Osprey - 1-16-2007 at 06:10 PM

Your skull would be of little archealogical value because it's not dolichocepalic (the neat, thin, amazing ones that are teaching us so much about world travel). If you leave fish carcasses and fish lips all up and down the sides of this little finger of land your notoriety will be assured but if you just tell everybody about the ones that got away you'll gain instant anonymity. You're already having way too much fun down here.