Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-4hhp2 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-05-08T22:48:01.646Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Chumash and the swordfish

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2015

Demorest Davenport
Affiliation:
Department of Biological Sciences, University of California, Santa Barbara CA 93106, USA
John R. Johnson
Affiliation:
Department of Anthropology, Santa Barbara Museum of Natural History, Santa Barbara CA 93105, USA
Jan Timbrook
Affiliation:
Department of Anthropology, Santa Barbara Museum of Natural History, Santa Barbara CA 93105, USA

Abstract

Linguistic, ethnographic, archaeological and technical evidence demonstrates the mythological and ceremonial importance of the swordfish in Chumash culture. From at least the 1st century AD, there existed among the Chumash of the Santa Barbara region, California, a productive fishery for swordfish (Xiphias gladius) by harpoon. The probability is that a shamanistic cult was intended to bring this great ‘master of the sea’ within reach of fishermen and to persuade it occasionally to drive whales ashore, making their meat available. Evidence from a number of world-wide sources shows that this Chumash belief was, indeed, founded in fact.

Type
Papers
Copyright
Copyright © Antiquity Publications Ltd. 1993

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Abbott, C.C. 1879. Steatite cooking pots, plates and food vessels, United States Geographical Survey West of the 100th Meridian 7: 93116.Google Scholar
Applegate, R.B. 1972. Ineseño Chumash grammar. Unpublished Ph.D dissertation. University of California, Berkeley.Google Scholar
Applegate, R.B. 1975a. Chumash narrative folklore as sociolinguistic data, Journal of California Anthropology 2(2): 188–97.Google Scholar
Applegate, R.B. 1975b. The Datura cult among the Chumash, Journal of California Anthropology 2(1): 617.Google Scholar
Applegate, R.B. 1978. Atishwin: the dream helper in south central California. Socorro (NM): Ballena Press. Anthropological paper 13.Google Scholar
Bean, L. (ed.). 1992. California Indian shamanism. Menlo Park (CA): Ballena Press. Anthropological paper 39.Google Scholar
Beeler, M.S. Barbareño Chumash texts from the notebooks of Mary J. Yee. Unpublished MS, on file at the Santa Barbara Museum of Natural History.Google Scholar
Bennyhoff, J.H. 1950. California fish spears and harpoons, Anthropological Records 9(4): L-4. 295–7. Berkeley (CA): University of California Press.Google Scholar
Benson, A.S. 1982. The noontide sun: the field notes and unpublished manuscripts of the Rev. Stephen Bowers. Unpublished MA thesis. California State University, Northridge.Google Scholar
Blackburn, T.C. 1975. December’s child: a book of Chumash oral narratives. Berkeley (CA): University of California Press.Google Scholar
Blacker, C. 1986. The Catalpa bow: a study of shamanistic practices in Japan. London: Allen … Unwin.Google Scholar
Breschini, G.S., Haversat, T. & Erlandson, J.. 1992. California radiocarbon dates. 7th edition. Salinas (CA): Coyote.Google Scholar
Brown, S.G. 1960. Swordfish and whales, Worsic Hvalfangst-Tidende 8: 345–51.Google Scholar
Bullen, F.T. 1898. The cruise of the Cachalot. London: T.M. Lupton.Google Scholar
Burnett, E.K. 1944. Inlaid stone and bone artifacts from Southern California. New York (NY): Contribution from the Museum of the American Indian Heye Foundation 13.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Burton, M. & Burton, R. 1969/70. Swordfish, in Wildlife encyclopedia 19: 2284–5. New York (NY): Funk & Wagnalls.Google Scholar
Clewlow, C.W. JR. (ed.). 1978. Four rock art studies. Socorro (NM): Ballena.Google Scholar
Eaton, M.H. 1982. (Ed. Jan Timbrook) Diary of a sea-captain’s wife: tales of Santa Cruz Island. Goleta (CA): McNally & Loftin.Google Scholar
Eliade, M. 1964. Shamanism: archaic techniques of ecstasy. New York (NY): Pantheon. Bölingen Series 76.Google Scholar
Fagan, B. 1991. Kingdoms of gold, kingdoms of jade. London: Thames & Hudson.Google Scholar
Follett, W.I. 1968. Fish remains from the Century Ranch site (LAn-229), Los Angeles County, California. Los Angeles (CA): University of California. Archaeological Survey Annual Report 6: 132–43.Google Scholar
Furst, P. 1974. The roots and continuities of shamanism, in Stones, bones and skin - ritual and Shamanic art. Artscanada 184 –7: 3360.Google Scholar
Garvin, G. 1978. Shamans and rock-art symbols, in Clewlow, (ed.): 6587.Google Scholar
Gibson, R.O. & Singer, C. 1978. Ven-195: treasure house of prehistoric cave art, in Clewlow, (ed.): 4564.Google Scholar
Gifford, E.W. 1940. California bone artifacts. Berkeley (CA): University of California. Anthropological Records 3(2): 153237.Google Scholar
Grant, C. 1965. The rock paintings of the Chumash. Berkeley (CA): University of California.Google Scholar
Greenwood, R.S. & Browne, R.O. 1969. A coastal Chumash village: excavations at Shisholop, Ventura Co., California. Los Angeles (CA): Southern California Academy of Sciences. Memoir 8.Google Scholar
Harrington, J.P. 1928. Exploration of the Burton Mound at Santa Barbara, California, Bureau of American Ethnology 44th Annual Report for 1926-1927: 23168.Google Scholar
Harrington, J.P. 1986. Ethnographic field notes 3: Southern California Basin. Washington (DC): Smithsonian Institution, National Anthropological Archives. (Microfilm edition, Millwood (NY): Kraus.)Google Scholar
Heizer, R.F. 1938. The plank canoe of the Santa Barbara region, California, Ethnological Studies (Göteborg) 7: 193237.Google Scholar
Heizer, R.F. 1952. California Indian linguistic records: the mission Indian vocabularies of Alphonse Pinart. Berkeley (CA): University of California. Anthropological Records 15(1): 183.Google Scholar
Heizer, R.F. & Whipple, M.A. 1971. The California Indians. Berkeley (CA): University of California.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hoover, R.L. 1973. Chumash fishing equipment. San Diego (CA): Museum of Man. Ethnic Technology Note 9.Google Scholar
Huddleston, R.W. & Barker, L.W. 1978. Otoliths and other fish remains from the Chumash midden at Rincón Point (SBa-1), Santa Barbara-Ventura Counties, California. Los Angeles (CA): Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County. Contribution in Science 289.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hudson, T. 1979a. Breath of the sun: life in early California as told by a Chumash Indian, Fernando Librado, to John P. Harrington. Banning (CA): Malki Museum.Google Scholar
Hudson, T. 1979b. A rare account of Gabrielino shamanism from the notes of John P. Harrington, Journal of California and Great Basin Anthropology 1(2): 356–62.Google Scholar
Hudson, T. & Blackburn, T.C. 1982. The material culture of the Chumash interaction sphere I: Food procurement and transportation. Los Altos (CA): Ballena Press. Anthropological paper 25.Google Scholar
Hudson, T., Blackburn, T., Curletti, R. & Timbrook, J. 1977. The eye of the flute: Chumash traditional history and ritual as told by Fernando Librado Kitsepawit to John P. Harrington. Santa Barbara (CA): Santa Barbara Museum of Natural History.Google Scholar
Hudson, T. & Conti, K. 1981. The aquatic motif in Chumash rock art, Journal of California and Great Basin Anthropology 3(2): 224–31.Google Scholar
Hudson, T., Timbrook, J. & Rempe, M. 1978. Tomol: Chumash watercraft as described in the ethnographic notes of John P. Harrington. Socorro (NM): Ballena Press. Anthropological paper 9.Google Scholar
Hudson, T. & Underhay, E. 1978. Crystals in the sky: the intellectual odyssey (involving Chumash astronomy, cosmology and rock art]. Socorro (NM): Ballena Press. Anthropological paper 10.Google Scholar
Johnson, J.R. 1982a. Analysis of fish remains from the Late Period Chumash village of Talepop (LAn-229), in King, C. et al., Archaeological investigations at Talepop (LAn-229): chapter 12. Report to the California Department of Parks and Recreation by the Office of Public Archaeology, University of California, Santa Barbara.Google Scholar
Johnson, J.R. 1982b. An ethnohistoric study of the island Chumash. Unpublished MA thesis, University of California, Santa Barbara.Google Scholar
Johnson, J.R. 1982c. The trail to Fernando, Journal of California and Great Basin Anthropology 4(1): 132–8.Google Scholar
Jones, P.M 1956. Archeological investigations on Santa Rosa Island in 1901, University of California Anthropological Records 17(2): 201–80.Google Scholar
Jonsgard, A. 1959. New find of sword from swordfish (Xiphias gladius) in blue whale [Balaenoptera musculus) in Antarctic, Norsk Hvalfangst-Tidende 7: 352–60.Google Scholar
Jonsgard, A. 1962 Three finds of swords from swordfish [Xiphias gladius) in Antarctic fin whales (Balaenoptera physalus (L)), Norsk Hvalfangst-Tidende 51(7): 287–91.Google Scholar
King, C.D. 1988. Oakbrook Regional Park archaeological report. Unpublished MS prepared for the Ventura County Archaeological Society, Ventura (CA).Google Scholar
King, C.D. 1990. The evolution of Chumash society. New York: Garland.Google Scholar
King, L.B 1982. Medea Creek Cemetery: late inland Chumash patterns of social organization, exchange and warfare. Unpublished Ph.D dissertation. University of California, Los Angeles.Google Scholar
Landberg, L.C.W. 1965. Chumash Indians of Southern California. Highland Park, Los Angeles (CA): Southwest Museum. Paper 19.Google Scholar
Landberg, L.C.W. 1975. Fishing effort in the aboriginal fisheries of the Santa Barbara region, California, in Casteel, R. & Quimby, G. (ed.), Maritime adaptations of the Pacific: 145–70. The Hague: Mouton.Google Scholar
Lee, G. 1981. The portable cosmos: effigies, ornaments and incised stone from the Chumash area. Socorro (NM): Ballena Press. Anthropological paper 21.Google Scholar
Machida, S. 1970. A swordfish sword found from a North Pacific sei whale, Scientific Reports of the Whales Research Institute 22: 163–4. Tokyo.Google Scholar
Markman, P. & Markman, H. 1989. Masks of the spirit: image and metaphoric Mesoamerica. Berkeley (CA): University of California.Google Scholar
Mckusick, M.B. et al. 1961. Excavations at Goleta, University of California Los Angeles (CA): University of California Archaeological Survey Annual Reportl960-1961: 339463.Google Scholar
MÖHR, A. & Sample, L. 1955. The religious importance of the swordfish in the Santa Barbara Channel area and its possible implications, Masterkey 29(2): 62–8.Google Scholar
Nemoto, T. 1959. Food of baleen whales with references to whale movements, Scientific Reports of the Whales Research Institute 14: 149290. Tokyo.Google Scholar
Norman, J. & Fraser, F. 1938. Giant fishes, whales and dolphins. London: Putnam.Google Scholar
Orr, P.C. 1944. The swordfish man, Santa Barbara Museum of Natural History Museum Leaflet 19(3): 33–4.Google Scholar
Orr, P.C. 1947. Additional, Californian bone artifact types in the Santa Barbara Museum of Natural History, in Gifford, E.W. Californian shell artifacts. Berkeley (CA): University of California. Anthropological Records 9(1): 115–32.Google Scholar
Orr, P.C. 1968. Prehistory of Santa Rosa Island. Santa Barbara (CA): Santa Barbara Museum of Natural History.Google Scholar
Peters, B. & Karlsson, K. 1976. Recovery of a swordfish (Xiphias gladius) sword from a fin whale (Balaenoptera physalus) killed off the west coast of Iceland, Canadian Field-Naturalist 90(4): 492.Google Scholar
Pisias, N. 1978. Paleoceanography of the Santa Barbara Basin during the last 8000 years, Quaternary Research 10: 366–84.Google Scholar
Read, C. 1892. An account of the ethnographic specimens found during Vancouver’s voyage to the Pacific Ocean, 1790-1795, Journal of the Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland 21: 99108.Google Scholar
Rogers, D. 1929. Prehistoric man of the Santa Barbara coast. Santa Barbara (CA): Santa Barbara Museum of Natural History.Google Scholar
Ruud, J. 1952. Do swordfish attack the large baleen whales? Norwegian Whaling Gazette 4: 191–93.Google Scholar
Smith, J. 1956. Pugnacity of marlins and swordfish, Nature 179: 1065.Google Scholar
Spanne, L.W. 1973. Excavations at the Barka Slough site, SBa-1010, Vandenberg Air Force Base. Unpublished MS on file, Department of Anthropology, University of California, Santa Barbara.Google Scholar
Spott, R. & Kroeber, A.L. 1971. Yurok shamanism, in Heizer, R.F. & Whipple, M.A. (ed.), The California Indians: a source book: 533–43. Berkeley (CA): University of California.Google Scholar
Townsend, C.H. 1924. Why swordfish strike ships, Bulletin of the New York Zoological Society 27: 3940.Google Scholar
Whitley, D.S. 1992. Shamanism and rock art in far western North America, Cambridge Archaeological Journal 2(1): 89113.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wissler, M. 1958. A Canalino site near Deer Canyon, Masterkey 32: 7387.Google Scholar
Woodhouse, C.D. 1991. Marine mammal beachings as indicators of population events, in Reynolds, J.E. III & Odell, D.K. (ed.). Marine mam-mal strandings in the United States: proceedings of the Second Marine Mammal Stranding Workshop; 3-5 December 1987, Miami, Florida. NOAA Technical Report NMFS 98: 111–15.Google Scholar
Zarudski, E. 1967. Swordfish rams the ‘Alvin’, Oceanus 13(4): 1418.Google Scholar