Beneath windswept bluffs and compacted shell deposits at CA-SRI-3 (Tecolote Point) lies a deep-time story of people who lived with the sea. Radiocarbon dates from the sampled context place human activity between 5982 and 5372 BCE — roughly 7,400 years before present — within the broader Santa Rosa Island cultural sequence. Archaeological data indicates repeated coastal occupation: dense shell middens, fragmented fish bone, and stone tools adapted for marine and littoral resources attest to a seafaring, forager lifestyle.
The material culture and site stratigraphy suggest a population well adapted to the Channel Islands' island ecology. Limited evidence suggests seasonal rounds focused on shellfish, fish, seabirds, and terrestrial mammals when available. The small assemblage at CA-SRI-3 fits a pattern seen across the islands and mainland California: sustained maritime subsistence strategies emerging after the initial peopling of the Americas. Genetic data from five individuals offers a tantalizing complement to the archaeological record, pointing to maternal continuity and Y-lineage diversity among these early islanders. Because the genetic sample is small, interpretations about migration routes and population continuity remain preliminary, but the combined archaeological and aDNA perspectives create a vivid portrait of coastal lifeways in the early Holocene.