On the wind-scoured terraces of Santa Rosa Island, at the CA-SRI-2B locus known locally as Skull Gulch, human remains and midden deposits speak to island occupation in the centuries before sustained European contact. Archaeological data indicate occupation and intensive marine resource use between roughly 1250 and 1450 CE. Shell middens, stone tool assemblages and burial contexts suggest communities adapted to a maritime lifeway—tending close knowledge of kelp forests, seabirds and pinnipeds.
Genetic data from five sampled individuals provide a slender but evocative thread linking these islanders to broader Native American maternal lineages: all five carry mtDNA haplogroup A2, a lineage widespread across the Americas. Three of the five males sampled carry Y-haplogroup Q, a paternal lineage commonly found in Indigenous populations across North and Central America. These genetic signals are consistent with deep regional ancestry but—critically—are based on very few individuals. Limited evidence suggests continuity with earlier Channel Islands inhabitants, but small sample numbers and the complex social history of the California coast mean hypotheses about population origins and migration remain provisional.
Careful integration of stratigraphy, radiocarbon dates and aDNA—together with respect for descendant community knowledge—offers the best path forward to refine the picture of origin and emergence here.