Gabrielino-Tongva History and Culture

“A Female Crusoe.” Journal of California and Great Basin Anthropology 28, no. 2 (2008): 191–93. Find at your local library.  Access through JSTOR. 

Acuña, Mark Frank. “A Journey to Tovanger (a Journey to the World): A Paper Presented as Part of the ‘Natural History of Urban Southern California: Lectures and Excursions’ Series, Spring 1999 at Rancho Santa Ana Botanic Garden, April 27, 1999,” 1999. Find at your local library.

Adams, Amanda. “The Arts of Everyday Life.” News from Native California, September 30, 2001. Find at your local library.  Access through LMU.

Amsden, Charles. “The Pre-Mission Indians of Los Angeles County.” Trails Magazine, 1935. Find at your local library.

Anderson, M. Kat. Tending the Wild: Native American Knowledge and the Management of California’s Natural Resources. 1st ed. University of California Press, 2005. Access through JSTOR.  Find at your local library.

———. Tending the Wild: Native American Knowledge and the Management of California’s Natural Resources. 2nd ed., 2013. Find at your local library.

Applegate, Richard B. Atishwin: The Dream Helper in South-Central California. Ballena Press Anthropological Papers 13. Socorro, N.M.: Ballena Press, 1978. Find at your local library.

Ascensión, Antonio de la. “Relación de La Jornada Que Hizo El General Sevastián Vizcayno al Descubrimiento de Las Californias El Año de 1602 Por Mandado Del Señor Excelentísimo Conde de Monterey, Virrey Que Era Dela Nueva España.” In Primera Parte de Los Veinte i vn Libros Rituales i Monarchia Indiana, edited by Juan de Torquemada, 2d ed., 1:693–715. Madrid, Spain: N. Rodriguezfranco, 1723. Find at your local library.

———. “Relación de La Jornada Que Hizo El General Sevastián Vizcayno al Descubrimiento de Las Californias El Año de 1602 Por Mandado Del Señor Excelentísimo Conde de Monterey, Virrey Que Era Dela Nueva España.” In Spanish Voyages to the Northwest Coast of America in the Sixteenth Century, edited by Henry Raup Wagner, 180–272. California Historical Society. Special Publication 4. San Fransico: California Historical Society, 1929. Find at your local library.

———. “Relación de La Jornada Que Hizo El General Sevastián Vizcayno al Descubrimiento de Las Californias El Año de 1602 Por Mandado Del Señor Excelentísimo Conde de Monterey, Virrey Que Era Dela Nueva España.” In Noticia de La California y de Su Conquista Temporal y Espiritual Hasta El Tiempo Presente. Sacada de La Historia Manuscrita, Formada En México Año de 1739, edited by Miguel Venegas, 3:22–139. México: Reimpreso por L. ALvarez y Alvarez de la Cadena, 1943. Find at your local library.

Bamforth, Douglas B. “Technological Organization and Hunter-Gatherer Land Use: A California Example.” American Antiquity 56, no. 2 (1991): 216–34. https://doi.org/10.2307/281416Find at your local library.  Access through JSTOR.

Barabas Potter, Bryn. “A Tongva Calendar Story.” News from Native California, Fall 2013. Find at your local library Access through LMU:

Bartelt, Guillermo. “A Cognitive Semantic Framework for Syncretism: The Case of the Southern California Powwow.” Ethnos 56, no. 1–2 (1991): 53–66. https://doi.org/10.1080/00141844.1991.9981424Find at your local library.

Bean, Lowell John, Thomas C. Blackburn, and Chester King, eds. “Chumash Inter-Village Economic Exchange.” In Native Californians: A Theoretical Retrospective, 289–318. Socorro, N.M: Ballena Press, 1976. Find at your local library.

Bean, Lowell John, and Charles R. Smith. “Gabrielino.” In Handbook of North American Indians, edited by William C. Sturtevant and Robert F. Heizer, 8:538–49. Washington: Smithsonian Institution, 1978. Find at your local library.

Belardes, Matias. “Native American Sacred Land on CSU Long Beach Campus Should Be Permanently Protected.” CalMatters, August 14, 2020, sec. My Turn. http://calmatters.org/commentary/my-turn/2020/08/native-american-sacred-land-on-csu-long-beach-campus-should-be-permanently-protected/, archived at https://perma.cc/7EV6-E6H9.

Berver, Meghan Elizabeth. “On the Shoulders of Seven Giants: Victoria Reid and the World of the Gabrielino.” State University of New York College at Oneonta, 2009. Find at your local library.

Bettinger, Robert L., and Martin A. Baumhoff. “The Numic Spread: Great Basin Cultures in Competition.” American Antiquity 47, no. 3 (1982): 485–503. https://doi.org/10.2307/280231Find at your local library. Access through JSTOR. Access through LMU.

Bitsoie, Freddie, James O Fraioli, Quentin Bacon, and Gabriella Trujillo. New Native Kitchen: Celebrating Modern Recipes of the American Indian, 2021. Find at your local library.

Blackburn, Thomas C. “Ceremonial Integration and Social Interaction in Aboriginal California.” In Native Californians: A Theoretical Retrospective, edited by Lowell John Bean and Thomas C. Blackburn, 225–43. Socorro, NM: Ballena Press, 1976. Find at your local library.

———, ed. December’s Child: A Book of Chumash Oral Narratives. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1975. Find at your local library.

Bleeker, Sonia. The Mission Indians of California. New York: Morrow, 1956. Find at your local library.

Boscana, Gerónimo. “A New Original Version of Boscana’s Historical Account of the San Juan Capistrano Indians of Southern California.” Translated by Peabody Harrington. Smithsonian Miscellaneous Collections, Publication 3255, 92, no. 4 (1934): 1–62. https://repository.si.edu/handle/10088/23860.

———. Chinigchinich: A Revised and Annotated Version of Alfred Robinson’s Translation of Father Gerónimo Boscana’s Historical Account of the Belief, Usages, Customs, and Extravagancies of the Indians of This Mission of San Juan Capistrano, Called the Acagchemem Tribe. Classics in California Anthropology 3. Banning, Calif: Malki Museum Press, Morongo Indian Reservation, 1978. Find at your local library.

———. “Introduccion y Transcipcion Por Bartolome Font Obrador.” In Los Indígenas de California. Lluchmayor, Mallorca, Spain: Imprenta Moderna, 1973.

Boulé, Mary Null, and Daniel Liddell. Gabrielino Tribe. California Native American Tribes. Vashon, Wash.: Merryant Pub., 1992. Find at your local library Access through the Internet Archive. 

Brickfield, A. J., and Elaine L Mills. A Guide to the Field Notes: Native American History, Language and Culture of Southern California/Basin. Vol. 3. The Papers of John Peabody Harrington in the Smithsonian Institution, 1907-1957. White Plains, NY: Kraus International Publications, 1986. Find at your local library.

Brown, Alan K. The Aboriginal Population of the Santa Barbara Channel. Vol. 69. University of California Archaeological Survey Reports. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Archaeological Research Facility Department of Anthropology, 1967. Find at your local library.  Access through University of California, Berkeley.

Brown, Vinson. Native Americans of the Pacific Coast: Peoples of the Sea Wind. Happy Camp, Calif: Naturegraph, 1985. Find at your local library.

Bryan, Bruce. Archaeological Explorations on San Nicolas Island. Southwest Museum Papers 22. Los Angeles: Southwest Museum, 1970. Find at your local library.

California’s Richest Indians the Chumash and Gabrielino, 2011. Find at your local library.

Cameron, Una B. “The History of San Gabriel Valley.” M.A., University of Southern California, 1938. Find at your local library. Access through LMU.

Carr, Amanda M. “Indian Hill: An Ethnohistory.” Dissertation/Thesis, Scripps College, 2000. Find at your local library.

Castillo, Edward D. “Blood Came from Their Mouths: Tongva and Chumash Responses to the Pandemic of 1801.” American Indian Culture & Research Journal 23, no. 3 (September 1999): 47–61. https://doi.org/10.17953/aicr.23.3.x38r448705451914. Find at your local library. Access through publisher’s website. Access through LMU.

———. “Blood Came from Their Mouths: Tongva and Chumash Responses to the Pandemic of 1801.” In Medicine Ways: Disease, Health, and Survival among Native Americans, edited by Clifford E. Trafzer and Diane Weiner, 16–31. Contemporary Native American Communities 6. Walnut Creek, CA: AltaMira Press, 2001. Find at your local library.

Caughey, John Walton, and LaRee Caughey, eds. Los Angeles: Biography of a City. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1976. Find at your local library.

Champagne, Duane, and Carole E Goldberg. A Coalition of Lineages: The Fernandeño Tataviam Band of Mission Indians, 2021. Find at your local library. Access through JSTOR.

Chavez, Yve. “Indigenous Artists, Ingenuity, and Resistance at the California Missions After 1769.” Ph.D. Art History, UCLA, 2017. Access through eScholarship.

Chiles, Frederic Caire. California’s Channel Islands: A History. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 2015. Find at your local library.

Coombs, Gary. “Opportunities, Information Networks and the Migration-Distance Relationship.” Social Networks 1, no. 3 (January 1, 1978): 257–76. https://doi.org/10.1016/0378-8733(78)90023-0. Find at your local library. Access through ScienceDirect.

Cornell, Ralph D. “The Plants of Museum Hill—III: Islay or Mountain Cherry.” The Masterkey 11, no. 3 (1937): 94–96. Find at your local library.

———. “The Plants of Museum Hill—IV: The Catalina Cherry.” The Masterkey 11, no. 4 (1937): 137–39. Find at your local library.

———. “The Plants of Museum Hill—V: The California Bay Tree.” The Masterkey 11, no. 5 (1937): 176–79. Find at your local library.

———. “The Plants of Museum Hill—VI: California’s Christmas Berry, or Toyon.” The Masterkey 11, no. 6 (1937): 204–8. Find at your local library.

Costansó, Miguel. “The Portolá Expedition of 1769-1770; Diary of Miguel Costansó.” Edited by Frederick John Teggart. Academy of Pacific Coast History 2, no. 4 (1911): 161–327. Access through the Internet Archive. Find at your local library.

Costo, Rupert, and Jeannette Henry Costo. Natives of the Golden State: The California Indians. San Francisco: Indian Historian Press, 1995. Find at your local library.

Coulter, Thomas. “Notes on Upper California, a Journey from Monterey to the Colorado River in 1832.” Journal of the Royal Geographical Society of London 5 (1835): 59–70. https://doi.org/10.2307/1797869. Find at your local library. Access through JSTOR.

Dakin, Susanna Bryant. “Rancho Santa Anita, Place of Many Waters.” Lasca Leaves 6, no. 3 (1956): 50–72. Website.

———. “The Restorations at Rancho Santa Anita.” Lasca Leaves 11, no. 1 (1961): 15–21. Website. Find at your local library.

Davis, Edward H., Charles Russell Quinn, and Elena Quinn. Edward H. Davis and the Indians of the Southwest United States and Northwest Mexico: A Harvest of Photographs, Sketches and Unpublished Manuscripts of the Indefatigable Collector of Artifacts of These Border Indians. Downey, Calif: E. Quinn, 1965. Find at your local library.

Demcak, Carol R. “Archaeological Salvage Investigations at CA-ORA-129, Laguna Niguel, Orange County, California.” Pacific Coast Archaeological Society Quarterly 24, no. 4 (September 1988): 1–33. Find at your local library. Pacific Coast Archaeological Society Quarterly.

Dixon, Keith A. “Reviving Puvunga: An Archaeological Project at Rancho Los Alamitos.” The Masterkey 46, no. 3 (1972): 84–92. Find at your local library.

Dobyns, Henry F. “Trade Centers: The Concept and a Rancherian Culture Area Example.” American Indian Culture & Research Journal 8, no. 1 (1984): 23–35. https://doi.org/10.17953/aicr.8.1.d311q81501507k15. Access through the Publisher’s Website. Find at your local library.

Eagle Rock – Highland Park 4-H Club, and Autry Museum of the American West, eds. Mixed Nuts: Tongva Use of the Southern California Mixed Oak / Black Walnut Woodland: A Curriculum Guide to the California American Indian Uses of Urban Los Angeles County Woodlands and Environs. Los Angeles, Calif: Southwest Museum, 1997. Access through the Autry. Find at your local library.

Eargle, Dolan. California Indian Country: The Land & the People. San Francisco, Calif: Trees Company Press, 1992. Find at your local library.

Eastman Johnston, Bernice. California’s Gabrielino Indians. Frederick Webb Hodge Anniversary Publication Fund. [Publications] v. 8. Los Angeles: Southwest Museum, 1962. Access through Hathitrust. Find at your local library.

———. “The Gabrielino Indians of Southern California: Part I.” The Masterkey 29, no. 6 (n.d.): 180–91. Find at your local library.

———. “The Gabrielino Indians of Southern California: Part II.” The Masterkey 30, no. 1 (February 1957): 6–21. Find at your local library.

———. “The Gabrielino Indians of Southern California: Part III.” The Masterkey 30, no. 2 (n.d.): 44–56. Find at your local library.

———. “The Gabrielino Indians of Southern California: Part IV.” The Masterkey 30, no. 3 (n.d.): 79–89. Find at your local library.

———. “The Gabrielino Indians of Southern California: Part IX.” The Masterkey 31, no. 2 (n.d.): 49–58. Find at your local library.

———. “The Gabrielino Indians of Southern California: Part V.” The Masterkey 30, no. 4 (n.d.): 124–32. Find at your local library.

———. “The Gabrielino Indians of Southern California: Part VI.” The Masterkey 30, no. 5 (n.d.): 146–56. Find at your local library.

———. “The Gabrielino Indians of Southern California: Part VII.” The Masterkey 30, no. 6 (n.d.): 191–96. Find at your local library.

———. “The Gabrielino Indians of Southern California: Part VIII.” The Masterkey 31, no. 1 (February 1957): 9–23. Find at your local library.

———. “The Gabrielino Indians of Southern California: Part X.” The Masterkey 31, no. 3 (n.d.): 95–105. Find at your local library.

———. “The Gabrielino Indians of Southern California: Part XI.” The Masterkey 31, no. 4 (n.d.): 121–30. Find at your local library.

———. “The Gabrielino Indians of Southern California: Part XII.” The Masterkey 31, no. 5 (n.d.): 155–65. Find at your local library.

———. “The Gabrielino Indians of Southern California: Part XIII.” The Masterkey 31, no. 6 (n.d.): 185–97. Find at your local library.

———. “The Gabrielino Indians of Southern California: Part XIV.” The Masterkey 32, no. 1 (n.d.): 11–20. Find at your local library.

Eisen, Gustavus A. and Königlich-Böhmische Gesellschaft der Wissenschaften. An Account of the Indians of the Santa Barbara Islands in California. Prag: Königl. Böhmische Gesellschaft der Wissenschaften, 1904. Access through Hathitrust.

Eisentraut, Phyllisa J. “Investigations of Prehistoric Seed Caches from Site CA-SC1I-1524, San Clemente Island.” Pacific Coast Archaeological Society Quarterly 26, no. 2/3 (March 1990): 93–113. Find at your local library.

Engelhardt, Zephyrin. The Missions and Missionaries of California. Vol. 2. 4 vols. San Francisco: James H. Barry, 1908. Find at your local library.

Episode 3: Tongva Elder Julia Bogany. Podcast. The Crown City Podcast, 2020. https://www.thecrowncitypodcast.com/episodes/episode-01-slow-travel-4t5bk-8wgel-dglty.

Erlandson, Jon M., Lisa Thomas-Barnett, René L. Vellanoweth, Steven J. Schwartz, and Daniel R. Muhs. “From the Island of the Blue Dolphins: A Unique Nineteenth-Century Cache Feature From San Nicolas Island, California.” The Journal of Island and Coastal Archaeology 8, no. 1 (January 1, 2013): 66–78. https://doi.org/10.1080/15564894.2013.766913. Find at your local library.

Fages, Don Pedro. “An Historical, Political, and Natural Description of California.” Translated by Herbert J. Priestley. The Catholic Historical Review 4, no. 4 (1919): 486–509. Access through JSTOR.

———. “An Historical, Political, and Natural Description of California, Part II.” Translated by Herbert I. Priestley. The Catholic Historical Review 5, no. 1 (1919): 71–90. Find at your local library. Access through JSTOR.

Fages, Pedro. A Historical, Political, and Natural Description of California. Translated by Herbert Ingram Priestley. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1937. Find at your local library.

Farnham, Thomas Jefferson. Life, Adventures, and Travels in California: To Which Are Added, Conquest of California, Travels in Oregon, and History of the Gold Regions. Pictorial edition. Nineteenth Century Collections Online: Science, Technology,and Medicine: 1780-1925, Part II. New York : St. Louis, Missouri: Nafis & Cornish ; Van Dien & Macdonald, 1849. Find at your local library.

Farnsworth, Paul. “Economics of Acculturation in the Spanish Missions of Alta California.” Research in Economic Anthropology 11 (1989): 217–49. Find at your local library.

———. “Missions, Indians, and Cultural Continuity.” Historical Archaeology 26, no. 1 (1992): 22–36. Find at your local library. Access through JSTOR.

Ferry, Michelle Llyn. “The Thin Red Line: Native American Culture Bearers, Memory and the Museum.” Ph.D., University of California, Santa Barbara, 2009. Find at your local library. Access through LMU.

Flynn, Johnny P., and Gary Laderman. “Purgatory and the Powerful Dead: A Case Study of Native American Repatriation.” Religion and American Culture: A Journal of Interpretation 4, no. 1 (1994): 51–75. https://doi.org/10.2307/1123877. Find at your local library. Access through JSTOR.

Font, Pedro. “Diary Kept by the Father Preacher Fray Pedro Font…During the Journey Which He Made to Monterey…[1775-1776].” In Anza’s California Expeditions, edited by Herbert Eugene Bolton, Vol. 4. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press, 1930. Find at your local library.

Forbes, Jack D. “Appendix II: The Tongva of Tujunga to 1801.” Annual Reports of the University of California Archaeological Society. Los Angeles, Calif., United States: University of California, Los Angeles, 1966. Find at your local library.

Gamble, Lynn H., ed. First Coastal Californians. First edition. Santa Fe, New Mexico: School for Advanced Research Press, 2015. Find at your local library.

Geiger, Maynard. “Mission San Gabriel in 1814.” Southern California Quarterly 53, no. 3 (1971): 235–50. https://doi.org/10.2307/41170369. Find at your local library. Access through JSTOR.

Geiger, Maynard J., and Clement W. Meighan, eds. As the Padres Saw Them: California Indian Life and Customs as Reported by the Franciscan Missionaries, 1813-1815. The Santa Barbara Bicentennial Historical Series 1. Santa Barbara, Calif. : Glendale, Calif: Santa Barbara Mission Archive Library ; distributed by A. H. Clark Co, 1976. Find at your local library.

Geiger, Maynard, and José María de Zalvidea. “Reply of Mission San Gabriel to the Questionnaire of the Spanish Government in 1812 Concerning the Native Culture of the California Mission Indians.” The Americas 12, no. 1 (1955): 77–84. https://doi.org/10.2307/979580. Find at your local library. Access through JSTOR.

Gifford, Edward Winslow. “Californian Balanophagy.” In Essays in Anthropology: Presented to a. L. Kroeber in Celebration of His Sixtieth Birthday, June 11, 1936, edited by Robert Harry Lowie, 87–98. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press, 1936. Find at your local library.

———. “Californian Kinship Terminologies.” Edited by A. L. Kroeber and Robert Harry Lowie. University of California Publications in American Archaeology and Ethnology 18, no. 1 (1965): 1–285. Find at your local library.

Glassow, Michael A. “The Significance to California Prehistory of the Earliest Mortars and Pestles.” Pacific Coast Archaeological Society Quarterly 32, no. 4 (1996): 14–26. http://www.pcas.org/Vol32N4/324Gla.pdf. Find at your local library.

Hamel, Jenny. “LA’s Tongva Descendants: ‘We Originated Here.’” KCRW, July 17, 2018. https://www.kcrw.com/culture/shows/curious-coast/las-tongva-descendants-we-originated-here. archived at https://perma.cc/WFH7-6CPW

———. Tongva Descendants Work to Keep Their Culture Alive. Radio. Curious Coast. KCRW, 2018. https://www.kcrw.com/culture/shows/curious-coast/tongva-descendants-work-to-keep-their-culture-alive#:~:text=For%20Craig%20Torres%2C%20keeping%20Tongva,reverence%20as%20his%20ancestors%20did.&text=Gabrielino%20Tongva%20Springs%20Foundation%2C%20which%20preserves%20the%20Kuruvunga%20Springs%20land.; https://perma.cc/P4VY-EXEN. archived at https://perma.cc/P4VY-EXEN

Hamilton, Denise. “Value of Artifacts From Lost Village Debated.” Los Angeles Times. August 25, 1985, Valley Edition edition, sec. Metro; 2; Zones Desk. Find at your local library. Access through ProQuest.

Hansen, Joan. “Artifacts on Display at Concordia.” Irvine World News. April 5, 2001. Find at your local library.

Harrington, John Peabody. Chinigchinich (Chi-Ñićh-Ñich): A Revised and Annotated Version of Alfred Robinson’s Translation of Father Geronimo Boscana’s Historical Account of the Belief, Usages, Customs and Extravagencies [Sic] of the Indians Ofthis Mission of San Juan Capistrano, Called the AcagchememTribe. Edited by Phil Townsend Hanna. Santa Ana, Calif: Fine Arts Press, 1933. Find at your local library.

———. “Cultural Element Distribution, XIX, Central California Coast.” University of California, Anthropological Records 7, no. 1 (1942): 1–46. Find at your local library. Access through University of California, Berkeley.

Harrington, John Peabody, Elaine L Mills, and Ann J Brickfield. The Papers of John Peabody Harrington in the Smithsonian Institution, 1907-1957. White Plains, N.Y.: Kraus International Publications, 1985. Find at your local library.

Heizer, Robert F. “The California Indians: Archaeology, Varieties of Culture, Arts of Life.” California Historical Society Quarterly 41, no. 1 (1962): 1–28. https://doi.org/10.2307/25155448. Find at your local library. Access through JSTOR.

Heizer, Robert F., and Mary A. Whipple, eds. The California Indians: A Source Book. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1951. Find at your local library.

———. The California Indians: A Source Book. 2d ed. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1971. Find at your local library.

Heizer, Robert Fleming, and Mary Anne Whipple. The California Indians: A Source Book. Berkeley; Los Angeles; London: University of California Press, 1973. Find at your local library.

Hillburg, Bill. “Tongva Roots Go Deep in L.A. Area: [Valley Edition].” Daily News. December 23, 2001, sec. News. Find at your local library. Access through ProQuest.

Holder, Charles F. All  About Pasadena and Its Vicinity; Its Climate, Missions, Trails and Cañons, Fruits, Flowers and Game. Boston; New York: Lee and Shepard; C.T. Dillingham, 1889. Find at your local library.

———. “The Ancient Islanders of California.” Popular Science Monthly, March 1896, 658–62. Find at your local library.

———. The Channel Islands of California: A Book for the Angler, Sportsman, and Tourist. Chicago: A.C. McClurg and Co., 1910. Find at your local library.

Hollimon, Sandra E. “The Third Gender in Native California: Two-Spirit Undertakers Among the Chumash and Their Neighbors.” In Women in Prehistory: North America and Mesoamerica, edited by Cheryl Claassen and Rosemary A. Joyce, 173–88. Regendering the Past. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1997. Find at your local library.

Hudson, (Dee) Travis. “Some J. P. Harrington Notes on the ‘Lone Woman’ of San Nicolas Island.” The Masterkey 52, no. 1 (1978): 23–28. Find at your local library.

Hudson, Travis. “Recently Discovered Accounts Concerning The ‘Lone Woman’ of San Nicolas Island.” Journal of California and Great Basin Anthropology 3, no. 2 (1981): 187–99. Find at your local library. Access through JSTOR.

Hudson, Travis, and Thomas C. Blackburn. The Material Culture of the Chumash Interaction Sphere, Vol. I: Food Procurements and Transportation. Vol. 1. 5 vols. BP-AP, no. 25, 27-28, 30-31. Los Altos, Calif. : Santa Barbara, Calif: Ballena Press ; Santa Barbara Museum of Natural History, 1982. Find at your local library.

———. The Material Culture of the Chumash Interaction Sphere, Vol. II: Food Preparation and Shelter. Vol. 2. 5 vols. BP-AP, no. 25, 27-28, 30-31. Los Altos, Calif. : Santa Barbara, Calif: Ballena Press ; Santa Barbara Museum of Natural History, 1982. Find at your local library.

———. The Material Culture of the Chumash Interaction Sphere, Vol. III: Clothing, Ornamentation, and Grooming. Vol. 3. 5 vols. BP-AP, no. 25, 27-28, 30-31. Los Altos, Calif. : Santa Barbara, Calif: Ballena Press ; Santa Barbara Museum of Natural History, 1982. Find at your local library.

———. The Material Culture of the Chumash Interaction Sphere, Vol. IV: Ceremonial Paraphernalia, Games, and Amusements. Vol. 4. 5 vols. BP-AP, no. 25, 27-28, 30-31. Los Altos, Calif. : Santa Barbara, Calif: Ballena Press ; Santa Barbara Museum of Natural History, 1982. Find at your local library.

———. The Material Culture of the Chumash Interaction Sphere, Vol. V: Manufacturing Processes, Metrology, and Trade. Vol. 5. 5 vols. BP-AP, no. 25, 27-28, 30-31. Los Altos, Calif. : Santa Barbara, Calif: Ballena Press ; Santa Barbara Museum of Natural History, 1982. Find at your local library.

Jacknis, Ira. “Alfred Kroeber and the Photographic Representation of California Indians.” American Indian Culture & Research Journal 20, no. 3 (September 1996): 15–32. https://doi.org/doi.org/10.17953/aicr.20.3.gur5h72113047276. Access through publisher’s website. Find at your local library.

Johnson, John. “The People of Quinquina: San Clemente Island’s Original Inhabitants as Described in .Ethnohistoric Documents.” Natural Resources Office Naval Air Station, North Island San Diego, CA 92135: Anthropology Department Santa Barbara Museum of Natural History 2559 Puesta del Sol Santa Barbara, CA 93105, February 1988. https://www.islapedia.com/index.php?title=JOHNSON,_John.

Johnson, Oscar. “Forest Visitors Gain Insights Into Indian Culture: Tourism: Volunteers Staff Center on Angeles Crest Highway in Effort to Dispel Myths about Native Americans.” Los Angeles Times. July 5, 2001, sec. California. Find at your local library. Access through ProQuest.

A Peoples Map. “Julia Bogany.” Accessed May 27, 2022. https://planning.lacounty.gov/site/apeoplesmap/stories/julia-bogany/. archived at https://perma.cc/7PTB-F8W2

Jurmain, Claudia K., and William McCawley. O, My Ancestor: Recognition and Renewal for the Gabrielino-Tongva People of the Los Angeles Area. Berkeley, Calif. : Long Beach, Calif: Heyday Books ; Rancho Los Alamitos Foundation, 2009. Find at your local library.

Kealhofer, Lisa. “Cultural Interaction during the Spanish Colonial Period: The Plaza Church Site, Los Angeles.” Ph.D., University of Pennsylvania, 1991. Find at your local library.

———. “Evidence for Demographic Collapse in California.” In Bioarchaeology of Native American Adaptation in the Spanish Borderlands, edited by Brenda J. Baker, 26–92. The Ripley P. Bullen Series. Gainesville: University Press of Florida, 1996. Find at your local library.

King, Chester. Prehistoric Native American Cultural Sites in the Santa Monica Mountains, Prepared for the Santa Monica Mountains and Seashore Foundation. Topanga, California: Topanga Anthropological Consultants, 1994. Find at your local library.

King, Tom. “Nations of Hunters? New Views of California Indian Societies.” The Indian Historian 5, no. 4 (1967): 12–17. Find at your local library.

Koerper, Henry C., Paul E. Langenwalter II, and Margaret E. Newman. “A ‘Stemmed Butterfly’ Eccentric Crescent and a Lunate Crescent from the Christ College Site, Orange County.” Pacific Coast Archaeological Society Quarterly 32, no. 2–3 (1996): 110–24. Find at your local library.

Koerper, Henry Carl. “Prehistoric Subsistence and Settlement in the Newport Bay Area and Environs, Orange County, California.” Ph. D., University of California, Riverside, 1981. Find at your local library. Access through LMU.

Kozhin, P. M. “I.G. Voznesenskii’s Ethnogeographical Observations in California.” European Review of Native American Studies 3, no. 2 (1989): 17–22. Find at your local library.

Krause, F. Die Kultur der kalifornischen Indianer in ihrer Bedeutung für die Ethnologie und die nordamerikanische Völkerkunde. Leipzig: O. Spamer, 1921. Find at your local library.

Kroeber, A. L. Anthropology: Culture Patterns & Processes. A Harbinger Book. New York: Harcourt, Brace & World, 1963. Find at your local library.

———. Handbook of the Indians of California. Smithsonian Institution Bureau of American Ethnology Bulletin 78. Washington: Government Printing Office, 1925. Access through Biodiversity Heritage Library. Find at your local library.

———. “Supposed Shoshoneans in Lower California.” American Anthropologist 7, no. 3 (1905): 570–72. https://doi.org/10.1525/aa.1905.7.3.02a00100. Find at your local library. Access through Wiley.

Kroeber, Alfred Louis. “A Mission Record of the California Indians From a Manuscript in the Bancroft Library.” University of California Publications in American Archaeology and Ethnology 8, no. 1 (1908): 1–27. Find at your local library. Access through University of California, Berkeley.

———. “California Culture Provinces.” University of California Publications in American Archaeology and Ethnography 17, no. 2 (1920): 151–69. Find at your local library. Access through HathiTrust.

———. “Elements of Culture in Native California.” University of California Publications in American Archaeology and Ethnology 13, no. 8 (November 21, 1922): 259–328. Find at your local library. Access through HathiTrust.

———. “Ethnographic Interpretations 7-11, 10. Problems on Boscana.” University of California Publications in American Archaeology and Ethnology 47, no. 3 (1959): 282–93. Find at your local library. Access through University of California, Berkeley.

Lambert, Patricia M. “Health in Prehistoric Populations of the Santa Barbara Channel Islands.” American Antiquity 58, no. 3 (1993): 509–22. https://doi.org/10.2307/282110. Find at your local library. Access through JSTOR.

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Longinos Martínez, José. California in 1792: The Expedition of José Longinos Martínez. Translated by Lesley Byrd Simpson. Huntington Library Publications. San Marino, Calif: Henry E. Huntington Library and ArtGallery, 1938. Find at your local library.

Longinos Martínez, José, and Lesley Byrd Simpson. Journal of José Longinos Martínez: Notes and Observations of the Naturalist of the Botanical Expeditionin Old and New California and the South Coast, 1791-1792. San Francisco: Published by John Howell-Books, 1961. Find at your local library.

Martell, Carrie Ann. “Sa’angna: Tongva Perspectives on Development of the West Bluffs and Ballona Wetlands.” M.A., University of California, Los Angeles, 2004. Find at your local library.

McCawley, William. The First Angelinos: The Gabrielino Indians of Los Angeles. Banning, CA: Malki Museum Press, 1996. Find at your local library.

Meighan, Clement W. “The Nicoleño.” Pacific Discovery 7, no. 1 (1954): 22–27. Find at your local library.

Meighan, Clement W., and Keith L. Johnson. “Isle of Mines; Catalina’s Ancient Indian Quarries.” Pacific Discovery 10, no. 2 (1957): 24–29. Find at your local library.

Miller, Bruce W. The Gabrielino. Los Osos, Calif: Sand River Press, 1991. Find at your local library.

Miller, Keith William. “Climatic Effects upon Gabrielino Economic Behavior and Cultural Evolution.” M.A., California State University, Long Beach, 1992. Find at your local library.

Moriarty, James Robert. “Factors Motivating the Rejection of Agriculture in Pre-Hispanic Southern California.” American Indian Quarterly 7, no. 1 (1983): 41–56. https://doi.org/10.2307/1183881. Find at your local library. Access through JSTOR. Access through LMU.

Morris, Steven Leigh. “Before the Padres.” L.A. Weekly. October 1, 1999. Find at your local library.

Morris, Susan L., Glenn J. Farris, Steven J. Schwartz, Irina Vladi L. Wender, and Boris Dralyuk. “Murder, Massacre, and Mayhem on the California Coast, 1814-1815: Newly Translated Russian American Company Documents Reveal Company Concern Over Violent Clashes.” Journal of California and Great Basin Anthropology 34, no. 1 (2014): 81–100. Find at your local library. Access through JSTOR.

Morris, Susan L, John R Johnson, Steven J Schwartz, René L Vellanoweth, Glenn J Farris, and Sara L Schwebel. “The Nicoleños in Los Angeles: Documenting the Fate of the Lone Woman’s Community.” Journal of California and Great Basin Anthropology 36, no. 1 (2016): 91–118. Access through eScholarship.

Nelson, N. C. “Notes on the Santa Barbara Culture.” In Essays in Anthropology: Presented to A. L. Kroeber in Celebration of His Sixtieth Birthday, June 11, 1936, edited by Robert Harry Lowie, 199–209. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press, 1936. Find at your local library.

Olivera, Elena Vega. “If Only She Could Speak for Herself: Representations of a California Channel Islands Woman, 1840s-2000s.” University of California, Santa Barbara, 2011. Find at your local library. Access through Santa Barbara Historical Museum.

Palóu, Francisco. “Noticias de Las California.” In Documentos Para La Historia de México, Vol. 4. México, 1857.

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Palóu, Francisco, and Herbert Eugene Bolton. Historical Memoirs of New California. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press, 1926. Find at your local library.

Palóu, Francisco, John T. Doyle, and Juan Crespí. Noticias de La Nueva California. 4 vols. Nineteenth Century Collections Online (NCCO): Photography:The World through the Lens. San Francisco: Impr. de E. Bosqui y cia, 1874. Find at your local library.

Pegelow, LeRoy. “The Gabrielino Indians of the Los Angeles Basin.” M.A., California State University, Fullerton, 1984. Find at your local library.

Phillips, George Harwood. Chiefs and Challengers: Indian Resistance and Cooperation in Southern California, 1769-1906. Second edition. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 2014. Find at your local library.

———. “Indians in Los Angeles, 1781-1875: Economic Integration, Social Disintegration.” Pacific Historical Review 49, no. 3 (August 1, 1980): 427–51. https://doi.org/10.2307/3638564. Find at your local library. Access through University of California Press.

———. “Indians in Los Angeles, 1781-1875: Economic Integration, Social Disintegration.” In The American Indian, edited by Roger L. Nichols, 3rd ed., 179–93. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1986.

———. Vineyards & Vaqueros: Indian Labor and the Economic Expansion of Southern California, 1771-1877. Before Gold, v. 1. Norman, Oklahoma: Arthur H. Clark Co., 2010. Find at your local library.

Pletka, Nicole. “Late Holocene Gabrielino Settlement Patterns in the Newport Coast Area of California: A Geographic Information Systems Based Approach.” M.A., California State University, Long Beach, 2005. Find at your local library. Access through ProQuest.

Portola, Gaspar de. “The Gabrielino Indians at the Time of the Portola Expedition.” Los Angeles: Southwest Museum, 1962. Find at your local library.

Preble, Donna. Yamino-Kwiti: A Story of Indian Life in the Los Angeles Area. Berkeley, Calif: Heyday Books, 1983. Find at your local library.

Priestley, Herbert Ingram. Franciscan Explorations in California. Edited by Lillian Estelle Fisher. Spain in the West 6. Glendale, Calif: Arthur H. Clark Co, 1946. Find at your local library.

Raab, L. Mark. “An Optimal Foraging Analysis of Prehistoric Shellfish Collecting on San Clemente Island, California.” Journal of Ethnobiology 12, no. 1 (1992): 63–80. Find at your local library. Access through the Society of Ethnobiology.

Raab, L. Mark, and Andrew Yatsko. “Prehistoric Human Ecology of Quinquina, a Research Design for Archaeological Studies on San Clemente Island, Southern California.” Pacific Coast Archaeological Society Quarterly 26, no. 2–3 (1990): 10–37. Find at your local library.

Los Angeles Times. “Race Vanishes as Juncio Dies.” February 10, 1921, sec. Editorials-News-Business-Society-The Drama. Access through ProQuest.

Rasmussen, Cecilia. “From Site of Ancient Tribal Tree, the City of Angels Grew.” Los Angeles Times. April 12, 1997, sec. Metro. Find at your local library. Access through ProQuest.

Reddy, Seetha N. “Feeding Family and Ancestors: Persistence of Traditional Native American Lifeways during the Mission Period in Coastal Southern California.” Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 37 (March 2015): 48–66. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jaa.2014.12.006. Find at your local library. Access through ScienceDirect.

Reddy, Seetha N., Justin Lev-Tov, Sarah Van Galder, and Richard Ciolek-Torello. “Fish Tales from the Ballona: The Role of Fish Along the Mainland Coast of Southern California.” Journal of California and Great Basin Anthropology 35, no. 2 (2015). Access through eScholarship.

Reichlen, Henry, and Paule Reichlen. “Le Manuscrit Boscana de La Bibliothèque Nationale de Paris; Relation Sur Les Indiens Acâgchemem de La Mission de San Juan Capistrano, Cal.” Journal de La Société Des Américanistes 60 (1971): 233–73. https://doi.org/10.3406/jsa.1971.2075. Find at your local library. Access online.

Reid, Hiram A, and Alfred James McClatchie. History of Pasadena, Comprising an Account of the Native Indian, the Early Spanish, the Mexican, the American, the Colony, and the Incorporated. Pasadena: Pasadena History Co., 1895. Find at your local library.

Reid, Hugo. “Hugo Reid’s Account of the Indians of Los Angeles Co.,Cal. Notes and Illustrations by W.J. Hoffman, M.D.” Essex Institute Bulletin 17, no. 1–3 (1885): 133. Access through LMU.

———. “Los Angeles County Indians.” Los Angeles Star. February 12, 1852. Find at your local library.

———. “Los Angeles County Indians.” Los Angeles Star. July 24, 1852. Find at your local library.

———. “The Indians of Los Angeles County.” Edited by Alexander S. Taylor. California Farmer and Journal of Useful Sciences, The Indianology of California, Second Series, 14, no. 19, 22 (February 11, 1861).

———. The Indians of Los Angeles County. Los Angeles: Arthur M. Ellis, 1926. Find at your local library.

———. The Indians of Los Angeles County: Hugo Reid’s Letters of 1852. Edited by Robert F. Heizer. Southwest Museum Papers 21. Los Angeles: Southwest Museum, 1968. Find at your local library.

Robinson, Alfred, and Gerónimo Boscana. Life in California during a Residence of Several Years in That Territory: Including a Narrative of Events Which Have Transpired since That Period When California Was an Independent Government. Santa Barbara: Peregrine Publishers, 1846. Find at your local library.

———. Life in California during a Residence of Several Years in That Territory: Including a Narrative of Events Which Have Transpired since That Period When California Was an Independent Government. Santa Barbara: Peregrine Publishers, 1970. Find at your local library.

Robinson, W. W. “Los Alamitos: The Indian and Rancho Phases.” California Historical Society Quarterly 45, no. 1 (1966): 21–30. https://doi.org/10.2307/25154101. Find at your local libraryAccess through JSTOR.

———. Ranchos Become Cities. Pasadena, Calif.: San Pasqual press, 1939. Find at your local library.

Robinson, W. W. The Indians of Los Angeles: Story of the Liquidation of a People. Early California Travels Series 8. Los Angeles: Glen Dawson, 1952. Find at your local library.

Rosenthal, Nicolas. “At the Center of Indian Country.” In A Companion to California History, edited by William Deverell and David Igler, 405–15. Blackwell Companions to American History 17. Chichester, UK: Wiley Blackwell, 2013. Find at your local library. Access through Wiley.

Sanchez, Georgianna Valoyce. “From the Boats. From the Island. In Their Own Words.” News from Native California, 2001. Find at your local library.

Schenden, Laurie K. “Reviving a Lost World: Santa Fe Springs Pays Homage to Its Past by Building a Native American Village.” Los Angeles Times. September 23, 1999, sec. Ventura County. Find at your local library. Access through ProQuest.

Schumacher, Paul. “Researches in the Kjökkenmöddings and Graves of a Former Population of the Santa Barbara Islands and the Adjacent Mainland.” Bulletin of the United States Geological Survey 3 (1877): 37–56. Find at your local library.

———. “The Method of Manufacture of Several Articles by the Former Indians of  Southern California.” In Annual Report of the Trustees of the Peabody Museum of American Archaeology and Ethnology, 2:258–68. Cambridge: Salem Press, 1880. Find at your local library. Access through Google Book.

Schwartz, Steven J. “Some Observations on the Material Culture of the Nicoleño.” In Proceedings of the Sixth California Islands Symposium, 83–91, 2005. Find at your local library.

Schwartz, Steven J., and Vellanoweth Rene L. “Lone Woman’s Cave Found on San Nicolas Island.” California Archaeology 5, no. 2 (December 1, 2013): 391–93. https://doi.org/10.1179/1947461X13Z.00000000021. Find at your local library.

Schwebel, Sara L. “Indians Mythic and Human.” In Child-Sized History: Fictions of the Past in U.S. Classrooms, 35–70. Nashville: Vanderbilt University Press, 2011. https://doi.org/10.2307/j.ctv167574f.6. Find at your local library.

Scott O’Dell. Island of the Blue Dolphins : The Complete Reader’s Edition. Vol. [Complete reader’s edition]. Oakland, California: University of California Press, 2016. Access through LMU. Find at your local library.

Shea, John Gilmary. History of the Catholic Missions among the Indian Tribes of the United States, 1529-1854. New York: P.J. Kenedy, Excelsior Catholic Publishing House, 5 Barclay Street, 1854. Find at your local library.

Singleton, Heather. Chronology of the Gabrieleno/Tongva Nation, Undated.

Smythe, Charles W, and Priya Helweg. Summary of Ethnological Objects in the National Museum of Natural History Associated with the Gabrielino Culture. Washington, D.C.: Repatriation Office, National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution, 1996. Find at your local library.

Stewart, Kelly Leah. “(Re)Writing and (Re)Righting California Indian Histories: Legacies of Saint Boniface Indian Industrial School, 1890 to 1935.” UCLA, 2018. https://escholarship.org/uc/item/5qx1w2mz. Access through eScholarship.

Stoll, Anne Q, John G Douglass, and Richard Ciolek-Torrello. “Searching for Guaspet: A Mission Period Rancheria in West Los Angeles.” Society for California Archaeology Proceedings 22 (2009): 1–9. Find at your local library.

Strong, William Duncan. “An Analysis of Southwestern Society.” American Anthropologist 29, no. 1 (1927): 1–61. https://doi.org/10.1525/aa.1927.29.1.02a00020. Find at your local library. Access on Wiley.

Sturtevant, William C., Garrick Alan Bailey, Douglas H. Ubelaker, Wilcomb E. Washburn, David Damas, June Helm, Wayne P. Suttles, et al., eds. Handbook of North American Indians. Vol. 8. 17 vols. Washington: Smithsonian Institution : For sale by the Supt. of Docs., U.S. G.P.O, 1978. Find at your local library.

Suntree, Susan. Sacred Sites: The Secret History of Southern California. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 2010. Find at your local library.

Sutton, Mark Q. “People and Language: Defining the Takic Expansion into Southern California.” Pacific Coast Archaeological Society Quarterly 41, no. 2 & 3 (April 2005): 31–93. http://www.pcas.org/assets/documents/Takic.pdf.

———. “The Del Rey Tradition and Its Place in the Prehistory of Southern California.” Pacific Coast Archaeological Society Quarterly 44, no. 2 (October 2008): 1–54. http://www.pcas.org/documents/DelReyweb.pdf.

———. “The Palomar Tradition and Its Place in the Prehistory of Southern California.” Pacific Coast Archaeological Society Quarterly 44, no. 4 (April 2008): 1–74. http://www.pcas.org/documents/444Palomar_000.pdf.

Sutton, Mark Q, and Jill K Gardner. “Reconceptualizing the Encinitas Tradition of Southern California.” Pacific Coast Archaeological Society Quarterly 42, no. 4 (February 2006): 1–64. http://www.pcas.org/assets/documents/2.ReconceptualizingtheEncinitasTradition_000.pdf Website.

Swanton, John Reed. The Indian Tribes of North America. 81st Cong., 2d Sess. House. Document, no. 383. Washington: U. S. Govt. Print. Off, 1952. Find at your local library.

Taylor, Alexander S. “The Indianology of California.” California Farmer and Journal of Useful Sciences 13, no. 3 (February 22, 1860). Find at your local library.

———. “The Indianology of California.” California Farmer and Journal of Useful Sciences, March 9, 1860. Find at your local library.

———. “The Indianology of California.” California Farmer and Journal of Useful Sciences, May 4, 1860. Find at your local library.

———. “The Indianology of California.” California Farmer and Journal of Useful Sciences, May 11, 1860. Find at your local library.

———. “The Indianology of California.” California Farmer and Journal of Useful Sciences, June 8, 1860. Find at your local library.

———. “The Indianology of California.” California Farmer and Journal of Useful Sciences 13, no. 19 (June 29, 1860). Find at your local library.

———. “The Indianology of California.” California Farmer and Journal of Useful Sciences 14, no. 16 (December 14, 1860): 124. Find at your local library. Access online.

Terada, Jason. “Tongva Indians Celebrate Roots Rediscovered.” Los Angeles Times. November 25, 1996, sec. Ventura County. Find at your local library. Access on ProQuest.

The Chia Café Collective, Barbara Drake, Lorene Sisquoc, Craig Torres, Abe Sanchez, Daniel McCarthy, Leslie Mouriquand, and Deborah Small. Cooking the Native Way: Chia Café Collective. Berkeley: Chia Café Collective, 2018. Access www.heydaybooks.com Find at your local library.

The Chinigchinish Religion: 2000 August 19 Meeting. Videorecording. California Indian Arts Association, 2000. Find at your local library. Access from the Autry Center.

Tomczyk, Weronika, and Nathan P. Acebo. “Enduring Dimensions of Indigenous Foodways in the Southern Alta California Mountain Hinterlands.” California Archaeology 13, no. 2 (July 3, 2021): 171–201. https://doi.org/10.1080/1947461X.2021.1997515.

Torres-Rouff, David Samuel. “A Pueblo by the Porciuncula, 1781 – 1840.” In Before L. A.: Race, Space, and Municipal Power in Los Angeles, 1781-1894, 23–54. The Lamar Series in Western History Ser. New Haven: Yale University Press, 2013. Find at your local library. Access through ProQuest.

Using Indigenous Plants, Food Sovereignty, and Sustainability. DVD. Vol. 3. 6 vols. Ekweenax Tovaangara = “Taking Care of Mother Earth.” California: Indigenous Media Institute, 2015. Access through Cal State Long Beach.

Valentin, Sylvere. “Prehistoric Population Replacement on Californias Channel Islands.” California State University, Los Angeles, 2010. Access through Cal State Los Angeles. Access though website. Find at your local library.

Vernon, Charles Clark. “A History of the San Gabriel Mountains.” The Historical Society of Southern California Quarterly 38, no. 1 (1956): 39–60. https://doi.org/10.2307/41168569. Access through JSTOR. Find at your local library.

Vizcaino, Sebastián. “De la Salida de Mexico del General.” In Documentos Referentes al Reconocimiento de las Costas de las Californias desde el Cabo de San Lucas al de Mendocino Recopliados en le Archivo de Indias, edited by P. Francisco Carrasco y Guisasola, 68–107. Madrid, 1882. Find at your local library.

———. “Diary of Sebastián Vizcaino, 1602-1603.” In Spanish exploration in the Southwest, 1542-1706., edited by Herbert Eugene Bolton, 52–103. New York: Scribner’s Sons, 1908. https://archive.org/details/spanishexplorati0000bolt. Find at your local library. Access on the Internet Archive.

Wagner, Henry R. Spanish Voyages to the Northwest Coast of America in the Sixteenth Century. California Historical Society. Special Publication, No. 4. San Francisco: California historical society, 1929. Find at your local library.

Walker, E. F. “Indians of Southern California.” The Masterkey 11 (1937): 184–94. Find at your local library.

———. “Indians of Southern California.” The Masterkey 12 (1938): 24–29. Find at your local library.

———. “Indians of Southern California.” The Masterkey 17 (1943): 201–16. Find at your local library.

Wallace, William J. “Prehistoric Seasonal Campsites in Southern California.” The Masterkey 42, no. 4 (1968): 134–41. Find at your local library.

Wayte, Beverly. “Linda Vista Revisited: From Indian Days to Modern Pasadenans: Part II.” Southern California Quarterly 73, no. 3 (1991): 251–78. https://doi.org/10.2307/41171581. Find at your local library. Access through JSTOR.

———. “Linda Vista Revisited: From Indian Days to Modern Pasadenans: Part III.” Southern California Quarterly 73, no. 4 (1991): 327–54. https://doi.org/10.2307/41171595. Find at your local library. Access through JSTOR.

———. “Linda Vista Revisited: From Indians to Modern-Day Pasadenans: Part I.” Southern California Quarterly 73, no. 2 (1991): 125–56. https://doi-org.electra.lmu.edu/10.2307/41171569 Find at your local library. Access through JSTOR.

Wei, Clarissa. “From Prickly Pear to Wild Cherry: Indigenous Foods of California.” KCET, November 14, 2016. https://www.kcet.org/shows/tending-the-wild/a-guide-to-some-indigenous-foods-of-california archived at https://perma.cc/94RJ-YQM3

Welch, Rosanne. “A Brief History of the Tongva Tribe: The Native Inhabitants of the Lands of the Puente Hills Preserve.” Claremont Graduate University], 2006. https://habitatauthority.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/05/native_american_history.pdf Find at your local library. Website.

Whispers; 1: The Chumash. Videorecording. Santa Monica City TV 3, 1991. Find at your local library.

Willard, Charles Dwight. The Herald’s History of Los Angeles City. Los Angeles, Cal: Kingsley-Barnes & Neuner Co. publishers, 1901. Find at your local library.

Williamson, M. Burton. “History of Santa Catalina Island.” Annual Publication of the Historical Society of Southern California and of the Pioneers of Los Angeles County 6, no. 1 (1903): 14–31. https://doi.org/10.2307/41169603 Find at your local library. Access through JSTOR.

Woodward, Arthur. Indian Foodstuffs of Los Angeles County. History Leaflet Series, No. 1. Los Angeles: Los Angeles County Museum, 1949.

Yates, L. G. “Section VII Archaeology of California: Southern California.” In Prehistoric Implements: A Reference Book. A Description of the Ornaments, Utensils, and Implements of Pre-Columbian Man in America, edited by Warren K. Moorehead, 230–52. Cincinnati: The Robert Clarke Co., 1900. Find at your local library.

Yatsko, Andrew. “Paleodemographic Change on San Clemente Island During the Medieval Climatic Anomaly.” In Proceedings of the Society for California Archaeology, 16:109–19, 2003. https://www.scahome.org/publications/proceedings/Proceedings.16Yatsko.pdf.

Young, Emily. “History in the Common: In San Gabriel, a Tribute to the Tongvas Shares Green Space with Trees and Picnic Tables.” Los Angeles Times. June 6, 2002. Find at your local library. Access through ProQuest.

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