HomeMy WebLinkAboutAppendix E - Cultural Resource SurveyWest Ming Specific Plan - Draft EIR
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Appendix E: Cultural Resources Survey
CULTURAL RESOURCE SURVEY OF WEST MING SPECIFIC PLAN
A 2,181.46 ACRE DEVELOPMENT IN SOUTHWEST BAKERSFIELD,
KERN COUNTY, CALIFORNIA
Submitted to:
McIntosh & Associates
Land Surveying
Bakersfield, California
Submitted by:
Archaeological Associates of Kern County (AAKC)
Robert A. Schiffman, M.A.
Alan P. Gold, Ph.C.
Keywords:
Stevens 7.5’ USGS Topographic Quadrangle, James Canal, Southern San
Joaquin Valley, Kern River, Southern Valley Yokuts, Kern County
Authors:
Robert A. Schiffman, M.A.
Alan P. Gold, Ph.C.
April 2005
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MANAGEMENT SUMMARY/ ABSTRACT
The following report documents the archaeological field survey for Buena
Vista (West Ming) Ranch, a 2,181.46 acre residential development, located in the
southwestern portion of the city of Bakersfield, Kern County, California. The
study area of the proposed development consists of approximately 3.4 sections
of farm land situated northwest of the intersection of Pacheco and Buena Vista
Roads. The purpose of this investigation was threefold: 1. locate and evaluate
any archaeological or historical resources present within the study area, 2.
assess their potential to yield significant cultural information, and 3. develop
guidelines to reduce impacts to any such remains that are present within the
area.
Most of the current study area was previously examined for archaeological
remains almost a decade ago (Parr 1994). As a result of that prior study, a
number of archaeological sites (10) and isolated artifacts (26) were found within
the area currently under investigation. These cultural remains were either sites
consisting of a surface scatter of artifacts (CA-KER-3958, -3960, -3965, -3966, -
3972, -3973, -3974, -3975, -3976, -3977H) or simply isolated artifacts. The
aboriginal sites were composed largely of fire-affected quartzite rocks, with a
slight additional compliment of some milling tools (3 items), freshwater Mussel
shell (1 fragment), burnt bone (5 items) and 15 pieces of unmodified chipping
waste.
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Previous recommendations from the prior study were made in order to
mitigate the adverse effects of potential construction projects on these potentially
significant cultural remains. Parr directed that future researchers should draft an
appropriate research design, the sites mapped, test excavated, the cultural
materials analyzed, and the sites evaluated as to their significance in light of the
guidelines set forth by the California State Historic Preservation Office.
Unfortunately, these fragile and limited cultural resources that were
documented over a decade ago have not fared well in the interim. Due to the
effects of continuous agricultural activities the materials were either, deeply
buried and/or moved from their original discovery locations, and perhaps
collected. These actions have greatly limited if not entirely destroyed any
scientific value that these remains may have contained.
The present study attempted to relocate and evaluate the previously
recorded resources. Unfortunately, significant alterations to the property have
taken place during the interim. Extensive grading, land leveling, disking, and the
systematic collection of all stone artifacts, have obliterated any traces of any of
the previously identified resources. Since this was the case none of the sites
could be relocated. The original locations for the sites and isolates were
intensively examined by three professional archaeologists. Yet, no remains of
those sites or materials were found. It is no longer possible to precisely relocate
the finds since they were not described in enough details and were not precisely
placed with the aid of Geographic Information Systems. Land leveling has
reduced the terrain to a featureless plain.
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Small sites such as those that were previously identified by Parr (1994)
are common in the Southern San Joaquin Valley and were typically associated
with slight rises in land sufficient to be elevated above the waterways of the Kern
River, various streams, sloughs, marshes, and lakes.
There were no problems affecting the results of the survey. No significant
cultural resources exist at present. This may be due to the fact that land leveling
completely altered the terrain and prior topography about five to six years ago.
The discussion below provides further details regarding the reason for the
complete destruction and obliteration of all evidence of the sites and isolates that
were previously recorded.
Based on the results of this study, it is recommended that archaeological
clearance be granted to the Buena Vista Ranch development project. However
we also recommend that a professional archaeologist and Native American
Monitor be employed during construction. This activity should be restricted to the
general locations and in the vicinity of the previous site locations and individual
isolates in order to assure that no late discoveries take place. These monitoring
activities should insure that all significant cultural resources are avoided, and that
no subsurface cultural materials or deposits are identified.
If prehistoric or historic remains are unearthed during construction, then
work in the discovery area should be stopped until the finds can be evaluated. If
necessary, data recovery operations shall be conducted before project
construction resumes. When historic or prehistoric resources are discovered they
are to be formally evaluated and if necessary recorded. A vrained cultural
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resources professional shall be given sufficient time to evaluate those resources
before resuming construction. If deemed significant these resources shall be
collected, further evaluated, and properly curated in a local academic facility such
as California State University, Bakersfield or the Kern County Museum.
PROJECT DESCRIPTION
The following project description was provided by Castle & Cooke and
details the nature of the proposed undertaking in greater detail:
“The project is an amendment to the Land Use Element and the
Circulation Element of the Metropolitan Bakersfield General Plan and a
concurrent Zone Change. The proposed Land Use and Circulation Element and
the Zone Change will consist of low density residential (4,207 units), low medium
density residential (606 units), high medium density residential (1537 units), high
density residential (238 units), commercial (74.41 acres), light industrial (217.18
acres), schools (68.36 acres), parks and lakes (205.17 acres), public facility
(Canal 20.38 acres), and the West Beltway and streets. The gross area is
2181.46± acres and is located in the northeast corner of Section 10, the
northeast corner of Section 15, Section 11, Section 13, and Section 14, in
southwest metropolitan Bakersfield.”
“The project includes annexation of ±1736.36 acres to The City of
Bakersfield and amendment to the “Sphere of Influence”. The Circulation
Element amendment includes a realignment of White Lane, deletion of Renfro
Road, as an arterial, and realignment of numerous collectors within the project
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area. The project lies south of Ming Avenue, north of the Asphalto Branch
Railroad, west of Buena Vista Road in Section 13, west of Allen Road in Section
11 and east of the West Beltway in Sections 10, 15 and 14. The project site is
currently under agricultural production and some oil extraction facilities are
located within the project area, specifically in the southerly portion of the site. “
UNDERTAKING
The study area is located within southwest Bakersfield and consists of
approximately 3.4 square miles (2181.46 acres) of farm land. Personal
communication with Royce Fast of R & G Farms confirmed that the land
investigated for this study had been leveled five or six years ago and has been
farmed relatively continuously for the last 25 years. The leveling served to disturb
and destroy all natural topographic features within the area. Additionally, Mr. Fast
informed us that during disking and field preparation, all noticeable rocks and
other foreign objects were picked up and removed in order to avoid damaging
farm equipment and crops. The result of all this activity was the destruction and
removal of all aboriginal and historic materials from those previously recorded
archaeological sites and isolates. The primary crops grown in the study site are
carrots, potatoes, garlic, and corn in rotation.
The location for the Buena Vista (West Ming) Ranch project consists of
approximately 3.4 square miles of farm land situated northwest of the intersection
Pacheco and Buena Vista Roads. The northwest corner of the property borders
the Kern River flood plain. The entire area, save for the Kern flood plain, has
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been subjected to farming for the last 25 years, with no portions of the study area
being undisturbed.
It has been argued that most areas of California have the potential to
contain cultural resource materials. Archaeological remains are routinely found
throughout the Central Valley. A records search at the local archaeological
information center indicated that several archaeological sites and isolated
artifacts had been recorded within and near to the proposed development. Due to
the presence of known resources within the project boundaries, and according to
provisions of the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA) guidelines, a
cultural resources investigation was required.
The 2,181.46 acres of land for the proposed development of Buena Vista
Ranch are located in most of the east ½ of Section 10, all of sections 11, 13 and
14 and a portion of the northeast ¼ of Section 15, within Township 30S., Range
26E., Mount Diablo Base Meridian (M.D.B.M.), as depicted on the Stevens 7.5'
U.S.G.S. Topographic Quadrangle. The areas investigated by this study are
identified in Appendix 3, Map 1.
The study area was examined and this report prepared by Robert. A.
Schiffman, consulting archaeologist and professor of anthropology at Bakersfield
College; and, Alan P. Gold consulting archaeologist with Archaeological
Associates of Kern County (AAKC). Assisting with the survey was Kish LaPierre,
graduate student in archaeology at California State University, Bakersfield
(CSUB). Brief resumes for all individuals can be found in Appendix 1. The
fieldwork was completed in October and November of 2003 and January of 2004.
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NATURAL SETTING
The study area is located on agricultural parcels of land within the
southern San Joaquin Valley and also within the flood plain of the Kern River. It
is further situated in the southern portion of the city of Bakersfield, in Kern
County, at an elevation averaging 350 feet above mean sea level (a.m.s.l.). The
study area is devoid of natural vegetation, save for the areas located within the
overflow deposits of the Kern. Within the project area were noted naturally
occurring native plant species, including: coyote melons (Curcubita sp.), tobacco
(Nicotiana sp.), mesquite (Prosopis sp.), cottonwoods (Populus fremontii), and
willows (Salix spp.). The soil was a sandy, light-colored, very fine-grained,
Quaternary alluvium.
Other historic features that exist in the study area include the Southern
Pacific Railroad tracks and James Canal. Overall ground visibility was excellent,
as the land had recently been disked and cleared.
CULTURAL SETTING
Prior to the field survey, a literature search was conducted at the Southern
San Joaquin Valley Information Center, a component of the California Historical
Resources Information System. This Information Center is the repository for the
archaeological reports and site records located in Kern County. According to this
archive, there have been six previous cultural resource investigations that
examined areas that included portions of the current project area. These include
studies for pipelines, road development and maintenance, and residential
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development. The most significant and recent study, with respect to the present
inquiry, was conducted for a 4,525-acre study that included much of the present
study area. That survey (Parr 1994) examined all of sections 11, 13, 14, 15 and a
portion of section 10. The Parr Report replicated or incorporated by reference
information from the other five surveys. No conflicting information relevant to this
project occurred between the six reports.
The current project includes the surface archaeological survey of lands
covering sections 11, 13, 14, and portions of sections 10 and 15. Therefore,
most of the present study area has already been surveyed for cultural resources.
As a result of that prior study, 21 archaeological sites and 29 isolated artifacts
were previously identified and formally recorded. Of those that were identified,
ten (10) archaeological sites and 19 isolates were located within the boundaries
of the present study area. Two (2) sites were recorded within section 13 and
eight (8) were found in section 14. These sites were described as follows:
CA-KER-3958 - 25 quartzite cobble fragments, 10 of which were fire-
affected. A possible hammer stone and three fragments of milling equipment
were also identified.
CA-KER-3960 - 15 quartzite cobble fragments and ten (10) fire-affected
rocks. A mano fragment of red quartzite and two flakes were also recorded.
CA- KER-3965 - 30 cobbles of fire-affected rock, five (5) chalcedony
flakes, five (5) pieces of burned bone and a fragment of freshwater shell
(Anodonta sp.)
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CA-KER-3966 - 15 cobbles of fire-affected rock, six (6) flakes of various
materials
CA-KER-3972 - two (2) cobbles of fire-affected rock, two (2) basalt flakes
and a midsection of a Grimes Canyon fused shale projectile point, ten (10)
pieces of freshwater shell (Anodonta sp.)
CA-KER-3973 - 30 cobbles of fire-affected rock, 20 flakes of various
materials, one basal core, burned and unburned bone, several pieces of
freshwater shell (Anodonta sp.)
CA-KER-3974 - 15 cobbles, ten (10) flakes of various material, about five
(5) pieces of burned and unburned bone
CA-KER-3975 - ten (10) cobbles, one chert core and six (6) flakes of
various materials
CA-KER-3976 – two (2) cobbles and one (1) basalt flake
CA-KER-3977H - scatter of 15 pieces of stoneware and ten (10) pieces of
glass that dates to the late 19th and early 20th centuries. The ceramics are of
Chinese ethnic affiliation. This material was located on the Stevens siding of the
Buttonwillow spur line of the Southern Pacific Railroad.
The isolates were recorded in three groups. Two were individual isolates
and one was a grouping of 26 separate isolates scattered throughout sections
11, 12, 13, 14 and 15. Of those 28 isolated items, 24 were within the confines of
the study area.
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The following isolates were found within the boundaries of the present
study area:
CCISOL Grouping of isolates- Within the study boundaries were found
individual isolates identified as 15 flakes, one (1) biface fragment, two (2) cores,
a mano fragment, a bowl mortar fragment, and an unmodified quartzite slab.
This isolate record covers a variety of individual artifacts spread over a five (5)
square mile sections. No great detail is provided in the brief isolate record and
some of these materials were not collected but were rather left in place and
others were collected.
IF-KER-947 (CC(2) Isolate 1- An isolated shouldered and contracting
stem projectile point comparing favorable to previously identified points in nearby
contexts including Buena Vista Lake (Wedel 1941:Plate 39. Figure L) and also
similar points identified by Gifford and Schenk (1926:80, Figure 1). The point
appeared to have been reworked and was manufactured from obsidian. Based
on the sketch, the item is a dart point (rather than an arrow), and as such it would
be older than the use of the bow and arrow which is though to have been
introduced about A.D. 300-600. Similar points in eastern Kern County have been
identified and are roughly contemporaneous with dates for Gypsum contracting-
stem points dating from 2000 B.C. to A.D. 600 and contemporaneous with the
Elko series in the Great Basin. The isolate record indicated that the item was
collected and is stored at the Cultural Resource Facility, California State
University, Bakersfield.
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IF-KER-948 (C&C Isolates 1-14) - Three (3) fragments from a disc-
shaped Pismo clam (Tivela stultorum) ornament were discovered. The ornament
was conically drilled from one side and also had a rectilinear design etched on its
edge. The isolate record indicated that the item was collected and is stored at
the Cultural Resource Facility, California State University, Bakersfield.
Recommendations for additional work were tendered in the Parr report.
The prior study suggested certain actions in order to mitigate the adverse effects
of potential construction projects on these potentially significant cultural remains.
Parr directed that future researchers should draft an appropriate research design,
the sites should be mapped, test excavated, the cultural materials analyzed,
reports prepared and the sites evaluated as to their significance in light of the
guidelines set forth by the California State Historic Preservation Office.
Unfortunately no follow-up studies, as those suggested, were ever
undertaken. Almost a decade has passed since that initial study. During this time
these fragile cultural materials have not fared well. They have been subjected to
numerous episodes of destructive activities that appear to have eliminated any
trace of these materials. Grading and agricultural activity is partly to blame, but it
seems also that leveling of the area, including the removal of any topographic
features or small ridges, mounds and hills served to completely eradicate any
evidence of these prior materials and even the landscape features that they were
previously associated with.
Careful examination of the areas where these materials were identified,
during several field visits, by three trained observers, failed to uncover any
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remnants of the sites or isolates. To reiterate all of the resources referenced in
the Parr report (1992) could not be relocated during our site visits.
POTENTIALLY SIGNIFICANT HISTORICAL RESOURCES
Located within the general project area are the Kern River Canal and an
occasional remnant of oil field equipment. Neither of these resources should be
considered a significant historical resource. The Canal and the equipment have
been drastically altered from their original form, shape and character. The Canal
has been modified many times over. It is barely recognizable as to its original
morphology and as such is not a good indicator of the historical period in which it
was originally constructed (see below criteria). As well the oil field equipment is
neither unique nor significant.
The criterion upon which the designation of "unique" or "significant" is
made is based on Appendix K, of CEQA (Checklist Question 5A §15064.5). This
document indicates that the importance or "uniqueness" of a historical resource
is based on whether that resource:
1. Is associated with a person or event recognized as significant in
Californian or American History, or of recognized scientific
importance in prehistory.
2. Can provide information useful in answering scientifically consequential
and reasonable research questions, which are of demonstrable
public interest.
3. Has a special quality such as oldest, best example or largest of its type.
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4. Is at least 100 years old and possesses substantial integrity.
5. Involves important research questions that can be answered only
through scientific studies.
If it is determined that a historical resource is unique, then efforts are
required to protect and preserve that resource. If the resource does not meet the
above criteria, that is, it is a "non-unique historic resource", as such it requires no
further consideration.
ENVIRONMENTAL BACKGROUND
This southern part of the Great Interior Central Valley of California is a
roughly flat-surfaced, structural trough (geosyncline) trending northwest-
southeast and bounded by the Coast Range to the west, the Transverse Range
(San Emigdio Mountains) to the south and the Tehachapi and Sierra Nevada
Mountains to the east. A maximum of 50,000 feet of marine Tertiary sediments
overlies the pre-Tertiary crystalline rocks, covered by a relatively thin Quaternary
alluvium. Significantly, prehistoric archaeological sites that occur within this area
are often buried by many meters of sediment, built up from the more recent
deposition of alluvium. It is estimated that the valley receives from 1 to 1.5
meters of alluvium each millennium (Riddell 2002). This arid area occupies a
large portion of western and central Kern County and commonly contains alluvial
fan surfaces with intervening basins of the playa type.
Floristically the study area currently falls within the Buena Vista-Tulare
drainage system – a broad treeless plain characterized by a scant 4 to 6 inches
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of rainfall in a year. The only perennial shrub in the area is saltbush (Atriplex
polycarpa). Munz and Keck (1968) note that, prior to Euroamerican intrusion and
disturbances, the area was perennial grassland, and also contained extensive
marshes, sloughs and playas. Aboriginal peoples found these large
interconnected water systems resource-rich locations for hunting and fishing and
the gathering of economic plants critical to their subsistence base. The
watercourses were generally shallow, only a few feet in depth, yet elsewhere the
waterways were up to 25 to 50 feet in depth. In 1868 this inland sea occupied an
area of approximately 1200 square miles. In 1938, a particularly wet year, Frank
F. Latta initiated and carried out an interesting experiment where he and several
youngsters piloted a 16-foot boat from downtown Bakersfield to Treasure Island
in San Francisco Bay, up the Central Valley waterways.
ARCHAEOLOGICAL BACKGROUND
One of the last publications issued from an archaeological pioneer,
Francis Riddell, recently chronicled the status of the archaeology of the San
Joaquin Valley (Riddell 2002). He suggested that up to 90% of all the
archaeological sites - including most of the significant and important village sites
- have been largely destroyed. Nevertheless, a huge body of literature exists
covering the archaeology of the southern San Joaquin. Much of the recent
material, encompassing hundreds of reports, has not been synthesized and is
formally unpublished. This “gray literature” has been completed for compliance
with State and Federal historic preservation law.
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Published literature on the area began with a survey conducted by a
University of California expedition in 1899 (Gifford and Schenk 1926). Following
this study, important research was completed at Buena Vista Lake by Waldo
Wedel for the WPA during the Great Depression of the 1930’s (Wedel 1941).
That early research was later augmented by the studies of Fredrickson and
Grossman (1977) and Hartzell (1992).
Walker revisited a Yokuts cemetery at Buena Vista Lake, providing some
general material (Walker and Woodward 1947). Riddell (1951) gleaned
information from private collections and reported on his studies and the
voluminous Paleo-Indian remains, found at Tulare Lake, were highlighted by
Riddell and Olson (1969). Moratto (1984) has also surveyed and reviewed a
number of studies of historic and proto-historic cemeteries for the area.
In 1965 William Wallace and Francis Riddell created an informal
consortium of researchers known as the Tulare Lake Archaeological Research
Group which spawned a newsletter and two monographs (Wallace and Riddell
1991, 1993). Over the last few decades California State University, Bakersfield,
Bakersfield College and the Kern County Archaeological Society have sponsored
a variety of archaeological and historical studies in the area. Notably all three
organizations have had ongoing formal publications that have disseminated the
results of their efforts (i.e. Dieckman 1977; Estep 1993; Fenenga 1994;
Schiffman and Garfinkel 1981; Siefkin et al. 1996; and many others).
The archaeological sites and materials identified over the years can be
subsumed into the traditional tripartite cultural sequence developed early on for
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the Central Valley (Lillard et al. 1939) and revised through subsequent detailed
seriation of burial lots and grave offerings (Bennyhoff and Hughes 1987). The
sequence spans a period of some 5000 to 7000 years. Earlier material is
associated with the Late Pleistocene and Early Holocene assemblages around
the lakeshores of Buena Vista and Tulare Lakes (Fredrickson and Grossman
1977; Hartzell 1992).
ETHNOGRAPHIC BACKGROUND
Anthropologists generally agree that the aboriginal population who
occupied the region of the study area were the Southern Valley Yokuts (Gayton
1948; Kroeber 1925; Latta 1977; Powers 1877; Wallace 1978). The following
brief background is abstracted from several ethnographic overviews
characterizing these tribal populations (see Wallace 1978; Osborne 1992;
Schiffman and Garfinkel 1981).
The Yokuts spoke a Penutian language found throughout the Central
Valley and they were organized into true named tribes (or tribelets) and were
separated into land-holding territorial units, based on dialectical differences. The
Spanish called the Yokuts, Tularenos, or people of the Tules, because of the
preponderance of bulrushes or tule reeds in their environs. The number of
Yokuts living in the villages in the area at the time of European contact has been
variously estimated from 3,150 to 9,500 persons (Cook 1955; Kroeber 1925;
Latta 1977).
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The abundant resources in the southern Valley allowed the Yokuts to
maintain villages year round. These were commonly situated on small creeks
flowing into a river or at the confluence of two creeks where there was a patch of
level land immune from flooding. A central chief ruled each tribe and was
assisted by one or more aides. Tribes were divided into two groups or moieties
and identified with totemic animals. Each moiety contained a number of clans.
Marriage was always outside of the moiety.
Yokuts were normally peaceful although intertribal skirmishes were
known. Shamans served as priests and the most important religious ceremonies
were the annual mourning ceremony for the dead, a Jimson weed (Datura
metaloides) puberty ceremony for both boys and girls, and the rattlesnake
ceremony aimed at protecting tribal members from being bitten during the
ensuing year.
Subsistence resources included large game animals as well as smaller
species. Large gamed included: deer (Odocoileus hemionus), tule elk (Cervus
elaphus), and pronghorn antelope (Antilocapra americana), and smaller game
include 2 species of rabbits (Lepus californicus and Sylvilagus audobonii).
Waterfowl was a major dietary focus, as the lakes and sloughs provided
abundant migratory birds including: mallard (Anas platyrnchos), wood ducks (Alix
sponsa) and Canadian geese (Branta candensis).
The staple aboriginal plant resource throughout California was the acorn.
However, this was less the case for the Yokuts. Yokuts did trade for this
important resource but their emphasis was on the ubiquitous tules (Scirpus
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actus) - as an acorn substitute. The huge roots of this plant and other related
rushes and cattails were harvested in great numbers, eaten raw or dried and
pounded into flour and made into a mush.
Watercraft made of tules were constructed of reeds and served to
navigate the local waterways. The tule “balsa” provided useful transportation and
an added means for hunting prey animals and gathering economic plants.
RESEARCH STRATEGY
One of the principal goals of cultural resource investigations is the
determination of significance for any archaeological or historical resources found
within a study area. The criterion upon which the designation of "unique" or
"significant" is made is based on Appendix K, of the California Environmental
Quality Act (CEQA). This document indicates that the importance or
"uniqueness" of an archaeological resource is based on whether that historic or
prehistoric site:
1. Is associated with a person or event recognized as significant in
Californian or American History, or of recognized scientific importance
in prehistory.
2. Can provide information useful in answering scientifically consequential
and reasonable research questions, which are of demonstrable
public interest.
3. Has a special quality such as oldest, best example or largest of its type.
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4. Is at least 100 years old and possesses substantial stratigraphic
integrity.
5. Involves important research questions that can be answered only
through archaeological methods.
If it is determined that an archaeological resource is unique, then efforts
are required to protect and preserve that resource. If the remains or sites do not
meet the above criteria, that is, "non-unique historic or archaeological resources",
they require no further consideration.
The primary objective of this survey was to re-survey the appropriate
portions within sections 10, 11, 13, 14, and 15 covered by the prior Parr (1994)
study, and to examine the un-surveyed portion of section 10, in order to identify
any cultural resources present. Included in this objective was to relocate and
evaluate the ten archaeological sites and 25 isolate artifacts previously recorded,
as per CEQA guidelines.
FIELD METHODOLOGY
The on-site field survey was conducted by three persons, who walked
transects through the property. These transects were spaced approximately 20
meters apart, providing a thorough coverage of the study area. Several field visits
were made in November and December of 2003 and again in January 2004.
During the initial visits a cursory examination of those areas under active
cultivation were made, surveying their peripheries and between the rows that
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were planted in carrots. Since the carrots were immature much of the ground
surface could still be discerned without much difficulty. For many of those areas
examined, the land had been recently cleared and leveled. Therefore, there were
few problems affecting the results of the survey, as ground visibility was good to
excellent.
RESULTS OF FIELD INVESTIGATION
In October and November 2003, and again in January of 2004 a ground
reconnaissance and field survey of the proposed, 2,181.46 acre Buena Vista
Ranch development was completed. As a result of this survey, no new
archaeological sites were found. As for those cultural remains previously
identified within the project area, it appears from previous records and
discussions with local tenants, who engage in agricultural activities within the
parcels that cultural materials did exist in the past but have been either collected
or were completely destroyed.
If artifacts including any rocks, stone bowls, milling equipment or other
aboriginal or historic materials were previously discovered during mechanical
plowing of the grounds, these were collected to avoid harming the equipment and
also because of the interest in such materials from the proprietors and lessees.
These materials are likely in private hands within the collections of private
individuals. Often stone bowls, milling slabs and hand stones are used to
decorate the perimeters of personal residences in the area. These materials do
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not normally make their way into the curational facilities at the local universities
nor are they given proper provenience and their scientific value is frequently lost.
Additionally, cultivation serves to move surface rocks deeper into the soil
and as such any surface cultural materials might become more deeply buried.
Leveling of mounds, hills, ridges and any other topographic features has
aided in the cultivation of the parcels but has not spared cultural materials. This
activity would serve to destroy their proper provenience, and in all instances
within the present study area, has also served to obliterate any trace of prior
aboriginal use and even earlier historic occupations.
As such the proposed project will not cause a substantial adverse change
in the significance of an archaeological or historic resource pursuant to §15064.5.
MITIGATION MEASURES, RECOMMENDATIONS, AND CONCLUSIONS
While an on-site field survey allows researchers to draw conclusions about
site presence or absence, there is always the possibility that buried remains
could be found during construction or earth disturbing activities. These areas
have a very low probability of significant cultural resources being present. This is
based on the fact that most of these areas were previously surveyed in 1992,
and further that all of these areas have been systematically leveled, cleared of
rocks and debris, and intensively farmed for many years.
Nevertheless, it is always possible for cultural resources to be uncovered
during ground disturbing activities. This is particularly true in the areas identified
as archaeological sites or the locations of the isolated artifacts in the Parr study
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(1992). Therefore, it is recommended that a cultural resources and Native
American monitor be on site during grading and associated construction activities
in the locations of the 10 cultural sites and the 26 isolates that were previously
recorded.
In addition, it is standard practice, that should subsurface archaeological
remains be unearthed during any ground disturbing activities or construction at
those site locales or within the entire project area, that work in the area of the
discovery should be stopped until the finds can be evaluated, and if necessary,
data recovery operations conducted before the resumption of project
construction. When historic resources are discovered during construction they
are to be formally recorded. Trained cultural resource professional shall be
contacted when these discoveries are made and they shall be given sufficient
time to evaluate those resource before resuming construction in those areas
where these resources were discovered. Cultural resource professionals shall
document photographically any historic resources discovered during
construction. These resources shall also be collected if considered significant.
These items shall be curated in a local academic facility such as California State
University, Bakersfield or the Kern County Museum.
Based on the results of this investigation, it is concluded that no significant
cultural resources are known to be present within the study area boundaries. It is
further understood that this study could not implement any of the
recommendations of the Parr Report since no resources were discovered.
Further given the absence of cultural resources, no consequences result from not
23
having fulfilled those recommendations. Hence, barring the discovery of
significant resources during ground disturbing activities, the proposed project will
not cause a substantial adverse change in the significance of any historic or
archaeological resources pursuant to §15064.5. Therefore, as long as monitoring
takes place and consideration is given to any resources may be unearthed during
construction activity, it is recommended that archaeological clearance be given to
the Buena Vista Ranch (West Ming Ranch) project. Upon acceptance of this
report, a copy will be sent to the Southern San Joaquin Valley Information
Center, California State University, Bakersfield.
24
REFERENCES
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1984 Shell Bead and Ornament Exchange Networks Between California
and the Western Great Basin. Anthropological Papers of the
American Museum of Natural History 64(2). New York.
Cook, S. F.
1955 The Aboriginal Population of the San Joaquin Valley. University of
California Anthropological Records 16(2).
Dieckman, J. J.
1977 Buena Vista Village: Tulamniu?. Kern County Archaeological
Society Journal 1:49-53.
Estep, H. A. (edited and annotated by M. Q. Sutton)
1993 The Indians of Pelican Island. Kern County Archaeological society
Journal 4:2-30.
Fenenga, G. L.
1994 Alternative Interpretations of Late Pleistocene Paleoecology in the
Tulare Lake Basin, San Joaquin Valley, California. Kern County
Archaeological Society Journal 5:105-117.
Fredrickson, D. A. and J. Grossman
1977 A San Dieguito Component at Buena Vista Lake, California. The
Journal of California Anthropology 4(2):173-190.
Gayton, A. H.
1948 Yokuts and Western Mono Ethnography. University of California
Anthropological Records 10(1-2).
Gifford, E. W. and W. E. Schenk
1926 Archaeology of the Southern San Joaquin Valley. University of
California Publications in American Archaeology and Ethnology
23(1).
Hartzell, L. L.
1992 Hunter-Gatherer Adaptive Strategies and Lacustrine Environments
in the Buena Vista Lake Basin, Kern County, California. Ph.D.
Dissertation. Department of Anthropology, University of California,
Davis.
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Kroeber, A.L.
1925 Handbook of the Indians of California. Bureau of American
Ethnology Bulletin 78. Washington, D.C.
Latta, F. F.
1977 Handbook of Yokuts Indians. Santa Cruz: Bear State Books.
Lillard, J. B., R. F. Heizer, and F. Fenenga
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College, Sacramento.
Moratto, M. J.
1984 California Archaeology. New York: Academic Press.
Munz, P. A. and D. A. Keck
1968 A California Flora. University of California Press.
Osborne, R. H.
1992 An Ethnographic Overview of the Southern Valley Yokuts. Kern
County Archaeological Society Journal 3:36-65.
Parr, Robert E.
1994 Archaeological Assessment of 4,525.45 Acres of Land West of
Bakersfield, Kern County, California. On file Southern San Joaquin
Valley Information Center.
Powers, S.
1877 Tribes of California. Contributions to North American Ethnology 3.
United States Geographical and Geological Survey of the Rocky
Mountain Region, Washington.
Riddell, F. A.
1951 The Archaeology of Site Ker-74. University of California
Archaeological Survey Reports 10:1-28. Berkeley.
2002 The Status of San Joaquin Valley Archaeology. In Essays in
California Archaeology: A Memorial to Franklin Fenenga edited by
William J. Wallace and Francis A. Riddell, pp. 55-61. University of
California Archaeological Research Facility, Contribution Number
60. Berkeley.
Riddell, F. A. and W. H. Olson
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Antiquity 4(2):121-130.
26
Siefkin , N., G. L. Fenenga and J. C. von Werlhof
1996 Early Salvage Archaeology in Kern County: Investigations at the
Buena Vista Golf Course Site (CA-Ker-240), California. Kern
County Archaeological Society Journal 7:15-35.
Schiffman, R. A. and A. P. Garfinkel
1981 Prehistory of Kern County: An Overview. Bakersfield College
Publications in Archaeology, Number 1.
Walker, E. F. and A. Woodward
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Society Publication. Bakersfield.
Wallace, W. J.
1978 Southern Valley Yokuts. In Handbook of North American Indians,
Volume 8, California, edited by Robert F. Heizer, pp. 448-461.
Washington: Smithsonian Institution.
Wallace, W. J. and F. A. Riddell
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of Lake Tulare’s Archaeological Past. The Tulare Lake
Archaeological Research Group, Redondo Beach, California.
1993 Contributions to Tulare Lake Archaeology II: The Quest for Tulare
Lake’s Archaeological Past. The Tulare Lake Archaeological
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27
APPENDICES
Appendix 1: Qualifications of Personnel
Appendix 2: Records Search
Appendix 3: Project Location Map
Appendix 4: Project Map Indicating Newly and Previously Surveyed Lands
Appendix 5: Updated Archaeological Site and Isolate Records
(Bound Separately)
28
Appendix 1:- Qualifications of Personnel
Principal Archaeologist:-
Robert A. Schiffman. B.A. 1969, CSU Northridge; M.A. 1971, UC Santa Barbara.
Professor of Anthropology, Bakersfield College, 1972- present. Has 33 years
field experience in Kern, Los Angeles, Ventura and Tulare Counties and has
prepared over 390 environmental reports and has several publications.
Co: Principal Archaeologist:-
Alan P. Gold (formerly Garfinkel). B.A. 1974 CSU Northridge; MA 1977, UC
Davis, Ph.D. 2005, UC Davis. Current position, Associate Environmental
Planner, Archaeologist, Central California Heritage Resources Branch, California
Department of Transportation, Fresno, California. Has 18 years field experience
in Kern County. Has authored over 150 environmental reports, scientific papers
and professional publications.
Field Assistant:-
Kish LaPierre. B.A. 2003 CSU Fresno; M.A. in progress at CSU Bakersfield.
Current position: Archaeological Technician at the Center for Archaeological
Research, CSU Fresno. Has participated in several archaeological field projects
and environmental studies.