Ethnohistory 2002 49(1):69-121; DOI:10.1215/00141801-49-1-69
Duke University Press
Portents of Plague from California's Protohistoric Period
William L. Preston
California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo
Abstract.
The thesis that California's native peoples were infected with Old World
diseases prior to the founding of the first mission in 1769 is attracting
increasing attention but is not widely accepted by students of the state's
prehistoric and colonial periods. The perceived lack of irrefutable proof that
exotic pestilence was transmitted to California after the Columbian landfall
but before foreign settlement is, in part, responsible for this lack of
recognition. This article scrutinizes many varied lines of evidence that are
interpreted as strong indicators of premission pestilence. As a consequence,
researchers of California's prehistoric and colonial past are urged to
seriously consider the profound implications for the interpretation of
archaeological, biological, and ethnographic data.

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Copyright 2002 by American Society for Ethnohistory