Bolsa Chica up for historic designation
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Danette Goulet
There is evidence that as early as 8,000 years ago there were people
living, fishing and burying their dead on Bolsa Chica.
On Friday the State Historic Preservation Commission will vote on
whether that history is enough to list the mesa as a state historic site.
It is a decision that members of the Bolsa Chica Land Trust have been
waiting on for a year, and one that was already made 18 years ago.
In 1983 the site was voted to be a historical site by the commission,
but that nomination never made it through the proper channels to be
recorded in Washington D.C., said Flossie Horgan, former president and
co-founder of the land trust.
Over the years the group has taken up the cause, once again in 1992,
then again in 1994.
“In 1994 human remains were found,” Horgan said. “It’s a burial site
-- we decided we were going to go forward again.”
Skull fragments and a tooth were found in 1999 during the grading of a
six-acre site on which Hearthside Homes planned to build homes.
Lucy Dunn, executive vice president of developer Hearthside Homes,
refused to comment Tuesday.
Last November efforts began again in earnest, lead by Patricia Martz,
a professor of anthropology at Cal. State L.A.
Martz studied the evidence of the village and burial site, which she
considers to be the most significant archeological site in coastal
Southern California.
Known as “ORA 83,” the site contains evidence of an 8,000-year-old
village site and burial ground on the Bolsa Chica Mesa. It is the last
remaining Early Holocene coastal village in Orange County and was the
site of the discovery of the largest number of “cogged” stones ever
found, Martz said.
These rare stone artifacts have been found at other sites but never in
the abundance that was found at Bolsa Chica.
“They are stones that have been shaped to look like cogs in a wheel or
stars,” Martz said.
The stones were created using what Martz called a pecking and grinding
technique, and have different numbers of grooves.
“This is the only place that this number of cogged stones have been
found,” she said. “They don’t show signs of wear, so we believe they were
used for rituals and had religious significance. After 7,000 years they
disappear, so it’s hard for us to know what they were used for.”
Martz believes that Bolsa Chica was a manufacturing site for these
religious stones, called star stones by Native Americans.
“My interpretation is that this was the central place for this
religion that stretched as far as the Mojave Desert where they were
trading these artifacts that had to do with a ritual,” she said.
“Although this group seems to have been the hub of this ritual, I think
it as important because we don’t really understand how people lived in
California 8,000, 9,000 years ago. And it looked like they had a
sophisticated religion that was not just local but recognized as far as
the Mojave Desert.”
Being listed as a historic site does not protect the land from
developer’s bulldozers, but land trust members hope it will add weight to
the case against building there.
“I wish I could say it would guarantee that the site would be
preserved, but that isn’t the way it works,” Martz said. “It will give it
the recognition it deserves as a historical site of importance. It just
really depends, it’s up to the local permit people.”
If the commission, which meets in San Simeon on Friday, votes to list
Bolsa Chica as a state historic site, it will then be taken to Washington
to be listed as a national historic site.
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