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Collection: Directories and Documents > Tanis Thorne Native Californian & Nisenan Collection

Genetics, Linguistics, and Prehistoric Migrations [DNA Analysis] (32 pages)

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ARTICLE . Genetics, Linguistics, and Prehistoric Migrations: An Analysis of California Indian Mitochondrial DNA Lineages . Johnson / Lorenz 39 N= @ Towns with mtDNA lineages e@ Other Villages (2) Number of mtDNA lineages from town oOo 5 10 20 30 40 Ses Miles 0510 20 30 40 CeCe eee Kilometers (1) Figure 2. Origins of mtDNA lineages from Chumash towns and villages. one Cruzejfio lineage. The Northern Chumash samples include one from a woman born in Tipu in the upper Salinas River watershed, one from a woman from Tsipxatu at Avila Beach, and one from a woman listed as being from Mission San Luis Obispo in the applications of her descendants in the 1928-1933 California Indian enrollment. Potentially, this last mentioned individual could also have been a Yokuts woman, because many people from Valley Yokuts tribes were baptized at San Luis Obispo; however, her mention among John Harrington’s Obispefio field notes has led us to include her among the Northern Chumash lineages until such time as her identity in mission records can be established with certainty. All but one of the Central Chumash samples and the single Cruzefio sample are traceable through their direct female lineages back to their original ancestral towns and villages. The two Purisimefio lineages descend from women born at Kashtayit (Santa Anita Creek) and ’Onomyo (Gaviota) along the western Santa Barbara Channel coast. The five Inesefio matrilines descend from two women born at Kalawashaq’, one woman from Soxtonokmu’, one woman from Mi’asap, and one woman from Shnaxalyiwi. The four Barbarefio lineages descend from two women from Mikiw (Dos Pueblos), one woman from Syuxtun (Santa Barbara), and one woman from Shuku (Rincon). Five Venturefio samples descend from women born at Shisholop (Ventura), Mat’ilha (Matilija), Mupu (Santa Paula), Kayiwish (Cayegues), and Muwu (Mugu). A sixth Venturefio lineage descends from a woman named Maria Tarango, who was reported by John Harrington to have spoken the Ventureiio Chumash language, but whose identity in the mission records has proven elusive. The Cruzeno matriline stems from a woman born at Hichimin on Santa Rosa Island who was baptized at Mission Santa Inés.