Ontological Beliefs and Hunter–Gatherer Ritual Landscapes: Native Californian Examples
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Ontology, Landscape and Power
The idea of the production of nature is indeed paradoxical, to the point of sounding absurd, if judged by the superficial appearance of nature in capitalist society. Nature is generally seen as exactly that which cannot be produced; it is the antithesis of human productive activity…[Yet] when this immediate appearance of nature is placed in historical context, the development of the material landscape presents itself as a process of the production of nature.
The presentation of concrete spatiality is always wrapped in the complex and diverse re-presentations of human perception and cognition, without any necessity of direct and determined correspondence between the two. These representations, as semiotic imagery and cognitive mappings, as ideas and ideologies, play a powerful role in shaping the spatiality of social life.
Power is dangerous. Failure to obey [its] commands and instructions will lead to sickness and even death.
Since man is never absolutely certain whether or not anything is a power source until it is tested or reveals itself, he lives in a constantly perilous world fraught with danger.
During rituals, when power is being exercised, past, present, and future may be fused into one continuous whole. A shaman may use power to bring sacred time into the present so that he can interact with beings from that time.(ibid)
The intent of this training was the ability to control the supernatural power-energy- force after it was conferred by a spirit in a recurrent dream, which usually was due to the initiative of the spirit, either because it was familiar with the family or because it took a liking to the dreamer.
Finally, a big rattlesnake came writhing against him, rattling its tail. Taivotsi had always been afraid of snakes, so he jumped up and ran away. That was his misfortune. If he had stayed on the spot, the snake would have entrusted him with supernatural medicine, for the snake was his spirit.
The general rules of the Shoshoni vision quest have been the following. The supplicant, usually male, rides a horse up to the foothills where the rock drawings are—the latter are the foremost places of spirit revelation. At a distance of some 200 yards from the rock with the pictographs he tethers his horse. Then he takes a bath to cleanse himself in the nearest creek or lake. Without moccasins he walks up to the rock ledge just beneath the drawings and makes his camp there. Naked except for a blanket around him, he lies down there under the open sky, waiting for the spirits to appear. Sometimes, I was told, the supplicant directs a prayer to a particular spirit depicted on the rock panel, anxious to receive that very spirit’s power…each spirit that blesses its client does so with a special gift related to the spirit’s own abilities.
There are moments during pilgrimage when pilgrims leave the physical world and enter into a spiritual one. This transition most frequently occurred at petroglyphs and rock paintings. For example, during a pilgrimage to an old volcano in southern Nevada, pilgrims sought the Puha from a mountain sheep-head petroglyph by entering into the image through a hole in the rock where the mountain sheep’s eye was located. Pilgrims inserted their finger, covered in red paint (oompi), into the eye hole. This act transitioned them into the rock and its spiritual dimension.
pictographs are “out of bounds” for people [i.e., non-shamans]. The paintings may be looked at without danger, but touching them will lead to quick disaster. One who puts his fingers on them and then rubs his eyes will not sleep again but will die in three days…it would be necessary for each of us to make an offering to an animal whose representation we chose to see. Otherwise we would see nothing…[Informants] told of a non-Indian woman who had come to see the pictographs but made no offering (possibly she was ignorant of the custom!). She heard the growl of a grizzly bear, fled, and never returned. According to one version of the story, she was actually chased by the bear.(Zigmond 1977, p. 79; quote in original)
In the night, his medicine [spirit helper] speaks to him and counsels him. It may tell him how he ought to paint.
Shamans painted their “spirits (anit) on rocks to show themselves, to let people see what they had done. The spirit must come first in a dream”.(Driver 1937, p. 126; quotation in original)
When ceremony or power seeking is successful at such places, they are selectively marked so future human visitors can more fully understand the purpose of the place.
3. Locating Power
3.1. Geological/Geomorphological Features
Mountains, which are perceived as powerful living beings, talk with the clouds and encourage them to bring moisture for the land. All high mountains call down moisture, but the highest mountains call down the most.
deep caves on slopes are sacred because they shelter life and collect water by seepage while remaining moist and dark like the initial world … Hence caves are sacred, vital in the flow of power.
[There] are a number of sacred places known to the people as places where power resides … some of these places (usually caves) were visited by men and women wanting to become doctors [shamans]. But they could also be visited by persons wishing to increase their luck in hunting or gambling, or by persons who wanted children or other special favors…The power found at each of these places was specific to it; i.e., it was localized there.
Volcanoes have a special place in Southern Paiute epistemology, and Southern Paiute people are strongly culturally attached to volcanic places and events. Volcanic episodes are distinctive moments when Puha moves from lower to higher levels of existence and causes the power to accumulate in these areas … Puha moves from the lower portions of the Earth to form hot springs, mountains, volcanic cones, basalt mesas, lava tubes, basalt bombs, and obsidian deposits…Southern Paiute people respect and interact with places of volcanic activity because these places contain powerful forces, spiritual beings who can balance human society at local, regional, and world levels. As one Southern Paiute elder said, “Volcanoes are sacred mountains. The old people knew it was alive, like the mother earth is alive. We have a song about the rocks shooting out of a volcano near home”.(Van Vlack 2012a, p. 224; quotation in original)
Religious leaders pass through initiation stages on volcanoes, which often provide visions, songs, and even physical objects such as obsidian, paint, crystals, and turquoise. The pilgrimage paths to volcanoes are repeatedly traversed. Offerings mark key places along the trail, thus building a permanent record of devotional behavior.
3.2. Hydrological Features
Springs, and water in general, take on symbolic as well as life sustaining functions. Water itself is a sacred substance to Southern Paiute people, and it must always be approached as a living thing, which means prayerfully. It has its own spirit, and there may also be other specific spirits that live in springs and other water sources that need to be carefully considered … Old People say that [spirits], like people, had preferred homes—certain springs that they preferred and where they stayed. People knew where these were and always approached these very cautiously and with utmost respect.
At dusk [he] met two strangers, who took him with them into the stream, through two doors, one formed of a snake, one of a turtle. He had become unconscious. Inside their house the otters, for such they had become, resumed human shape. They offered power to their guest, with the threat that he could not live if he refused. He took the gift, but asked for instructions concerning it.
[A man] ate tobacco and got drunk on it [i.e., hallucinated]. At the hole there was a rock that opened and closed. He waited, and at a moment when the rock opened, he slipped through quickly and went in…The man saw water that was like a window. He could see the mountains through it. But it wasn’t water. He passed through it and did not get wet. When he was outside, he looked back and saw the ‘water’ again.(Zigmond 1980, p. 177; quote in original)
3.3. Transient Natural Phenomena
one of the last strongholds of native sorcery [i.e., shamanism]. It was said that spirits lit their fires and began to dance there at dusk.
You hear bullroarers and tocar [instruments playing] and gritar [shouting]—dogs barking—many people in there—it is like a fiesta…The wind blows strong, the earth quakes.
3.4. Cultural Associations
Power remains diffused everywhere while also concentrated in web-like pathways. It can still be encountered accidentally while travelling, provided that close attention is paid to surroundings.
When ceremony or power seeking is successful at such places, they are selectively marked so future human visitors can more fully understand the purpose of the place.
4. Discussion
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
1 | I use the term ‘tribes’ following contemporary Native American, rather than formal anthropological, usage. A tribe is, thus, a generic term for an ethnic (and sometimes linguistic) group that resides in a particular region and may have a variety of kinds of organizational structures. I also use ‘rock writing’ as opposed to the more common ‘rock art’ because rock writing is the much-preferred label for petroglyphs and pictographs among the tribes with whom I work. |
2 | Due to the rampant exploitation and commodification of images of the Carrizo Plain pictographs, the Bureau of Land Management has requested that no additional photographs of the rock writing motifs and panels in the Carrizo Plain National Historic Landmark Rock Art District be published. No images of the paintings from the district are included here as a result. |
References
- Aginsky, Burt W. 1943. Culture Element Distributions: XXIV, Central Sierra. Anthropological Records. Berkeley: University of California, vol. 8, pp. 393–468. [Google Scholar]
- Alberti, Benjamin. 2016. Archaeologies of ontology. Annual Reviews in Anthropology 45: 163–79. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Applegate, Richard B. 1974. Chumash Placenames. Journal of California Anthropology 1: 186–205. [Google Scholar]
- Applegate, Richard B. 1975. The Datura cult among the Chumash. The Journal of California Anthropology 2: 7–17. [Google Scholar]
- Applegate, Richard B. 1978. Atishwin: The Dream Helper Complex in South-Central California. Anthropological Papers #13. Socorro: Ballena Press. [Google Scholar]
- Arnold, Richard, and Richard W. Stoffle. 2006. Puha Path to Black Mountain. Paper presented at 30th Great Basin Anthropological Conference, Las Vegas, NV, USA, October 19–21. [Google Scholar]
- Bean, Lowell John. 1974. Mukat’s People: The Cahuilla Indians of Southern California. Berkeley: University of California Press. [Google Scholar]
- Bean, Lowell John. 1975. Power and Its Application in Native California. Journal of California and Great Basin Anthropology 2: 25–33. [Google Scholar]
- Bean, Lowell John. 2017. Mukat’s Last Gift: Mortuary Customs among the Cahuilla Indians. Menlo Park: Malki-Ballena Press. [Google Scholar]
- Bean, Lowell John, Sylvia Brakke Vane, and Jackson Young. 1991. The Cahuilla Landscape: The Santa Rosa and San Jacinto Mountains. Menlo Park: Ballena Press. [Google Scholar]
- Beemer, Eleanor. 1980. My Luiseno Neighbors: Excerpts from a Journal Kept in Pauma Valley, Northern San Diego County, 1934 to 1974. Ramona: Acoma Books. [Google Scholar]
- Benedict, Ruth F. 1924. A brief sketch of Serrano culture. American Anthropologist 26: 366–92. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Benson, Arlene, and Floyd Buckskin. 1991. Magnetic Anomalies at Petroglyph Lake. Rock Art Papers 8: 53–64. [Google Scholar]
- Bettinger, Robert L. 2015. Orderly Anarchy: Sociopolitical Evolution in Aboriginal California. Berkeley: University of California Press. [Google Scholar]
- Bevilacqua, Andrea, Marcus Bursik, Abani Patra, E. Bruce Pitman, Qingyuan Yang, Radhika Sangani, and Shannon Kobs-Nawotniak. 2018. Late Quaternary eruption record and probability of future volcanic eruptions in the Long Valley volcanic region (CA, USA). Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth 123: 5466–94. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Blackburn, Thomas. 1975. December’s Child: A Book of Chumash Oral Narratives. Berkeley: University of California. [Google Scholar]
- Blackburn, Thomas. 1977. Biopsychological aspects of Chumash rock art. Journal of California Anthropology 4: 88–94. [Google Scholar]
- Brooks, Cecil R., William M. Clements, Jo Ann Kantner, and G. Y. Poirier. 1979. A Land Use History of Coso Hot Springs, Inyo County, California. NWC Administrative Publication 200. Ridgecrest: China Lake Naval Air Weapons Station. [Google Scholar]
- Carroll, Alex K., M. Nieves Zedeño, and Richard W. Stoffle. 2004. Landscapes of the Ghost Dance: A cartography of Numic ritual. Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory 11: 127–56. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Carroll, Kristen Jean. 2007. Place, Performance and Social Memory in the 1890s Ghost Dance. Ph.D. dissertation, Department of Anthropology, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ, USA. [Google Scholar]
- Carver, Deborah H. 1998. Native Stories of Earthquake and Tsunamis, Redwood National Park, California. Manuscript on File. Crescent City: National Park Service, Redwood National and State Parks. [Google Scholar]
- Cimarelli, Corrado, and Kimberly Genareau. 2021. A review of volcanic electrification of the atmosphere and volcanic lightning. Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research 422: 107449. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Cummins, Kenneth L. 2012. On the relationship between terrain variations and LLS-derived lightning parameters. Paper presented at 31st International Conference on Lightning Protection (ICLP), Vienna, Austria, September 3–7. [Google Scholar]
- David, Robert J. 2016. Spirit Fire and Lightning Songs: Looking at Myth and Shamanism on a Klamath Basin Petroglyph Site. Contributions of the Archaeological Research Facility Number 66. Berkeley: University of California. [Google Scholar]
- Dawkins, Richard. 2006. The God Delusion. Boston: Houghton Mifflin. [Google Scholar]
- Dennett, Danial C. 2006. Breaking the Spell: Religion as a Natural Phenomenon. New York: Viking. [Google Scholar]
- Derr, John S. 1973. Earthquake lights: A review of observations and present theories. Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America 63: 2177–87. [Google Scholar]
- Driver, Harold E. 1937. Cultural Element Distributions: VI, Southern Sierra Nevada. Anthropological Records. Berkeley: University of California, vol. 1, pp. 53–154. [Google Scholar]
- Driver, Harold E. 1939. Cultural Element Distributions: X, Northwest California. Anthropological Records. Berkeley: University of California, vol. 1. [Google Scholar]
- Drucker, Phillip. 1937. Culture Element Distributions: V, Southern California. Anthropological Records. Berkeley: University of California, vol. 1. [Google Scholar]
- DuBois, Constance G. 1904. The Story of Chaup. Journal of American Folklore 17: 217–42. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- DuBois, Constance G. 1906. Mythology of the Mission Indians. Journal of American Folklore 19: 147–64. [Google Scholar]
- DuBois, Constance G. 1908. The Religion of the Luiseño Indians of Southern California. Publications in American Archaeology and Ethnology. Berkeley: University of California, vol. 8. [Google Scholar]
- Fidani, Cristiano. 2010. The earthquake lights (EQL) of the 6 April 2009 Aquila earthquake, in Central Italy. Natural Hazards and Earth System Sciences 10: 967–78. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Fierstein, Judy, and Wes Hildreth. 2017. Eruptive history of the Ubehebe crater cluster, Death Valley, California. Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research 335: 128–46. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Fowler, Catherine S. 1992. In the Shadow of Fox Peak: An Ethnography of the Cattail Eater Northern Paiute People of Stillwater Marsh. Cultural Resource Series No. 5. Carson City: USDI Fish and Wildlife Service. [Google Scholar]
- Fowler, Catherine S. 2002. What’s in a Name? Some Southern Paiute Names for Mojave Desert Springs as Keys to Environmental Perception. Conference Proceedings. Spring-fed Wetlands: Important Scientific and Cultural Resources of the Intermountain Region. Available online: http://www.wetlands.dri.edu (accessed on 1 October 2023).
- Fowler, Catherine S., and Don D. Fowler, eds. 1971. Anthropology of the Numa: John Wesley Powell’s Manuscript on the Numic Peoples of Western North America. Smithsonian Contributions to Anthropology 14. Washington: Smithsonian Institution. [Google Scholar]
- Fowler, Catherine S., and Sven Samuel Liljeblad. 1986. Northern Paiute. In Handbook of North American Indians 11: Great Basin. Edited by Warren D’Azevedo. Washington: Smithsonian Institute, pp. 435–65. [Google Scholar]
- Fowler, Catherine S., Molly Dufort, and Mary Rusco. 1995. Residence Without Reservation: Ethnographic Overview and Traditional Land Use Study, Timbisha Shoshone, Death Valley National Park, California. Report on File. Bishop: California BLM. [Google Scholar]
- Garvin, Gloria. 1978. Shamans and rock art symbols. In Four Rock Art Studies. Edited by C. William Clewlow Jr. Socorro: Ballena Press, pp. 65–74. [Google Scholar]
- Gayton, Anna H. 1948. Yokuts and Western Mono Ethnography. Anthropological Records. Berkeley: University of California, vol. 10. [Google Scholar]
- Gifford, Edward W. 1918. Clans and Moieties in Southern California. Publications in American Archaeology and Ethnology. Berkeley: University of California, vol. 14, pp. 155–219. [Google Scholar]
- Harrington, John Peabody. 1926. Researches on the Archaeology of Southern California. Explorations and Field-Work of the Smithsonian Institution in 1925. Smithsonian Miscellaneous Collection. Washington: Smithsonian Institution, vol. 78, pp. 106–11. [Google Scholar]
- Harrington, John Peabody. 1942. Culture Elements Distributions: XIX, Central California Coast. Anthropological Records. Berkeley: University of California, vol. 7, pp. 1–46. [Google Scholar]
- Harrington, John Peabody. 1978. Annotations to Chinigchinich: A Revised and Annotated Version of Alfred Robinson’s [1846] Translation of Father Gerónimo Boscana’s Historical Account of the Belief, Usages, Custom and Extravagancies of the Indians of this Mission of San Juan Capistrano Called the Acagchemem Tribe. Edited by Geronimo Boscana. Banning: Malki Museum Press. [Google Scholar]
- Harris, Jack S. 1940. The White Knife Shoshoni of Nevada. In Acculturation in Seven American Indian Tribes. Edited by Ralph Linton. New York: D. Appleton-Century, pp. 39–116. [Google Scholar]
- Hawkes, David. 2003. Ideology, 2nd ed. London: Routledge. [Google Scholar]
- Heizer, Robert F., ed. 1955. California Indian Linguistic Records: The Mission Indian Vocabularies of H.W. Henshaw. Anthropological Records. Berkeley: University of California, vol. 15. [Google Scholar]
- Holle, Ronald L., and Daile Zhang. 2023. Flashes of Brilliance: The Science and Wonder of Arizona Lightning. New York: Springer Nature. [Google Scholar]
- Hooper, Lucille L. P. 1920. The Cahuilla Indians. Master’s thesis, University of California, Berkeley, CA, USA. [Google Scholar]
- Horton, Robin. 1976. African traditional thought and Western science. Africa 37: 50–71, 155–87. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Horton, Robin. 1982. Tradition and modernity revisited. In Rationality and Relativism. Edited by Martin Hollis and Steve Lukes. Cambridge: MIT Press, pp. 201–60. [Google Scholar]
- Hough, Susan E. 2007. Writing on the walls: Geological context and early American spiritual beliefs. In Myth and Geology. Edited by Luigi Piccardi and W. Bruce Masse. Special Publications, 272. London: Geological Society, pp. 107–15. [Google Scholar]
- Hudson, D. Travis, and Ernest Underhay. 1978. Crystals in the Sky: An Intellectual Odyssey Involving Chumash Astronomy, Cosmology and Rock Art. Socorro: Ballena Press. [Google Scholar]
- Hudson, D. Travis, and Georgia Lee. 1984. Function and Symbolism in Chumash Rock Art. Journal of New World Archaeology 4: 26–47. [Google Scholar]
- Hudson, D. Travis, and Katherine Conti. 1981. The “Aquatic Motif” in Chumash Rock Art. Journal of California and Great Basin Anthropology 3: 224–31. [Google Scholar]
- Hudson, D. Travis, and Thomas C. Blackburn. 1986. The Material Culture of the Chumash Interaction Sphere. Volume 4: Ceremonial Paraphernalia, Games, and Amusements. Menlo Park and Santa Barbara: Ballena Press/Santa Barbara Museum of Natural History. [Google Scholar]
- Hudson, D. Travis, Thomas C. Blackburn, Rosario Curletti, and Jan Timbrook, eds. 1977. The Eye of the Flute: Chumash Traditional History and Ritual as Told by Fernando Librado Kitsepawit to John P. Harrington. Santa Barbara: Museum of Natural History. [Google Scholar]
- Hultkrantz, Åke. 1961. The masters of the animals among the Wind River Shoshoni. Ethnos 26: 198–218. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Hultkrantz, Åke. 1987. Native Religions of North America: The Power of Visions and Fertility. San Francisco: Harper and Row. [Google Scholar]
- Irwin, Charles, ed. 1980. The Shoshoni Indians of Inyo County, California: The Kerr Manuscript. Socorro: Ballena Press. [Google Scholar]
- Kelly, Isabel T. 1932. Ethnography of the Surprise Valley Paiute. Publications in American Archaeology and Ethnology. Berkeley: University of California, vol. 31, pp. 67–210. [Google Scholar]
- Kelly, Isabel T. 1936. Chemehuevi Shamanism. In Essays in Anthropology, Presented to A.L. Kroeber in Celebration of His Sixtieth Birthday. Berkeley: University of California, pp. 129–42. [Google Scholar]
- Kelly, Isabel T., and Catherine S. Fowler. 1986. Southern Paiute. In Handbook of North American Indians Vol. 11: Great Basin. Edited by Warren D’Azevedo. Washington: Smithsonian Institute. [Google Scholar]
- Keyser, James D., and Michael A. Klassen. 2001. Plains Indian Rock Art. Seattle: University of Washington Press. [Google Scholar]
- Klinger, Ralph E. 2001. Late Quaternary volcanism of Ubehebe Crater. In Quaternary and Late Pliocene Geology of the Death Valley Region: Recent Observations on Tectonics, Stratigraphy, and Lake Cycles (Guidebook for the 2001 Pacific Cell—Friends of the Pleistocene Fieldtrip). Edited by Michael Machette, Margo L. Johnson and Janet L. Slate. File Report 01-51. Menlo Park: USGS Open, pp. A21–A24. [Google Scholar]
- Kroeber, Alfred L. 1907. The Religion of the Indians of California. Publications in American Archaeology and Ethnology. Berkeley: University of California, vol. 4, pp. 319–56. [Google Scholar]
- Kroeber, Alfred L. 1908a. Ethnography of the Cahuilla Indians. Publications in American Archaeology and Ethnology. Berkeley: University of California, vol. 8, pp. 29–68. [Google Scholar]
- Kroeber, Alfred L. 1908b. Origin Tradition of the Chemehuevi Indians. Journal of American Folklore 21: 240–42. [Google Scholar]
- Kroeber, Alfred L. 1925. Handbook of the Indians of California. Bureau of American Ethnology Bulletin 78. Washington: Smithsonian Institution. [Google Scholar]
- Kroeber, Alfred L. 1976. Yurok Myths. Berkeley: University of California Press. [Google Scholar]
- Laird, Carobeth. 1974. Chemehuevi religious beliefs and practices. Journal of California Anthropology 1: 19–25. [Google Scholar]
- Laird, Carobeth. 1976. The Chemehuevis. Banning: Malki Museum. [Google Scholar]
- Laird, Carobeth. 1984. Mirror and Pattern: George Laird’s World of Chemehuevi Mythology. Banning: Malki Museum. [Google Scholar]
- Layton, Robert. 1992. Australian Rock Art: A New Synthesis. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. [Google Scholar]
- Layton, Robert. 2001. Ethnographic and Symbolic Approaches. In Handbook of Rock Art Research. Edited by David S. Whitley. Walnut Creek: Altamira Press, pp. 311–31. [Google Scholar]
- Lévi-Strauss, Claude. 1966. The Savage Mind. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. [Google Scholar]
- Lévy-Bruhl, Lucien. 1923. Primitive Mentality. London: George Allen and Unwin. [Google Scholar]
- Lewis-Williams, J. David. 1981. Believing and Seeing: Symbolic Meaning in Southern San Rock Paintings. London: Academic Press. [Google Scholar]
- Liljeblad, Sven. 1986. Oral tradition: Content and style of verbal arts. In Handbook of North American Indians, Volume 11, Great Basin. Edited by Warren D’Azevedo. Washington: Smithsonian Institution, pp. 641–59. [Google Scholar]
- Liwosz, Chester R. 2017. Petroglyphs and puha: How multisensory experiences evidence landscape agency. Time and Mind 10: 175–210. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Lockner, David A., Malcolm J. S. Johnston, and James D. Byerlee. 1983. A mechanism to explain the generation of earthquake lights. Nature 302: 28–33. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Lowie, Robert H. 1909. The Northern Shoshone. Anthropological Papers. New York: American Museum of Natural History, vol. 2. [Google Scholar]
- Lowie, Robert H. 1924. Notes on Shoshonean Ethnography. Anthropological Papers. New York: American Museum of Natural History, vol. 20. [Google Scholar]
- Ludwin, Ruth S. 2001. Searching for Native Stories about Cascadia Subduction Zone. Poster presented at 2001 Seismological Society of America Meetings, Seattle, WA, USA; Available online: https://library.wisn.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/07/130063-Ludwin2001_Poster_SSA.pdf (accessed on 7 June 2023).
- Ludwin, Ruth S., and Gregory J. Smits. 2007. Folklore and earthquakes: Native American oral traditions from Cascadia compared with written traditions from Japan. In Myth and Geology. Edited by Luigi Piccardi and W. Bruce Masse. Special Publications 273. London: Geological Society of London, pp. 67–94. [Google Scholar]
- Ludwin, Ruth S., Coll-Peter Thrush, Karen James, David Buerge, Chris Jonientz-Trisler, James Rasmussen, Kathy Troost, and Andy De Los Angeles. 2005. Serpent spirit-power stories along the Seattle fault. Seismological Research Letters 76: 426–31. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Malinowski, Bronislaw. 2014. Magic, Science and Religion and Other Essays. London: Allen and Unwin. First published 1925. [Google Scholar]
- Malouf, Carling. 1974. The Gosiute Indians. In The Shoshone Indians, American Indian Ethnohistory: California and Basin-Plateau Indians. New York: Garland Press, pp. 25–172. [Google Scholar]
- Mayet, Nasreen, Jasper Knight, and Stefan W. Grab. 2016. Spatial and temporal patterns of lightning strikes in the eastern Lesotho Highlands, southern Africa. South African Geographical Journal/Suid-Afrikaanse Geografiese Tydskrif 98: 321–36. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- McMillan, Alan D., and Ian Hutchinson. 2002. When the mountain dwarves danced: Aboriginal traditions of paleoseismic events along the Cascadia Subduction Zone of North America. Ethnohistory 49: 41–68. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- McNutt, Stephen R., Edward Venzke, and Earl R. Williams. 2010. Volcanic lightning: Global observations and constraints on source mechanisms. Bulletin of Volcanology 72: 1153–67. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Menon, Usha, and Julia L. Cassaniti. 2017. Introduction: Universalism without Uniformity. In Universalism without Uniformity: Explorations in Mind and Culture. Edited by Julia L. Cassaniti and Usha Menon. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, pp. 1–22. [Google Scholar]
- Midgley, Mary. 2001. Science and Poetry. London: Routledge. [Google Scholar]
- Midgley, Mary. 2002. Evolution as a Religion: Strange Hopes and Stranger Fears, revised ed. London: Routledge. [Google Scholar]
- Midgley, Mary. 2003. The Myths We Live by. London: Routledge. [Google Scholar]
- Miller, Jay. 1983a. Basin Religion and Theology: A Comparative Study of Power (Puha). Journal of California and Great Basin Anthropology 5: 66–86. [Google Scholar]
- Miller, Jay. 1983b. Numic Religion: An Overview of Power in the Great Basin of Native North America. Anthropos 78: 337–534. [Google Scholar]
- Miller, Jay. 1985. Shamans and Power in Western North America: The Numic, Salish and Keres. In Woman, Poet Scientist: Essays in New World Anthropology Honoring Dr. Emma Lou Davis. Edited by Great Basin Foundation. Anthropological Papers No. 29. Socorro: Ballena Press, pp. 56–66. [Google Scholar]
- Olofson, Harold. 1979. Northern Paiute shamanism revisited. Anthropos 1/2: 11–24. [Google Scholar]
- Park, Willard Z. 1938. Shamanism in Western North America: A Study in Cultural Relationships. Studies in the Social Sciences No. 2. Evanston: Northwestern University. [Google Scholar]
- Patencio, Francisco. 1943. Stories and Legends of the Palm Springs Indians. Palm Springs: Palm Springs Desert Museum. [Google Scholar]
- Pavesic, Max G. 2007. The Bonneville flood debris field as sacred landscape. Journal of California and Great Basin Anthropology 27: 15–28. [Google Scholar]
- Reid, Hugo. 1958. The Indians of Los Angeles County: Hugo Reid’s Letters of 1852. Edited by Robert F. Heizer. Southwest Museum Papers 21. Highland Park. [Google Scholar]
- Riddell, Francis A. 1978. Honey Lake Paiute Ethnography. Occasional Paper 3, Part I. Carson City: Nevada State Museum. [Google Scholar]
- Robinson, David W. 2013. Transmorphic being, corresponding affect: Ontology and rock-art in south-central California. In Archaeology after Interpretation: Returning Materials to Archaeological Theory. Edited by Benjamin Alberti, Andrew Jones and Joshua Pollard. Walnut Creek: Left Coast Press, pp. 59–78. [Google Scholar]
- Robinson, David W., Kelly Brown, Moira McMenemy, Lynn Dennany, Matthew J. Baker, Pamela Allan, Caroline Cartwright, Julienne Bernard, Fraser Sturt, Elena Kotoula, and et al. 2020. Datura quids at Pinwheel Cave, California, provide unambiguous confirmation of the ingestion of hallucinogens at a rock art site. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 117: 31026–37. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
- Rubinstein, James M. 1989. The Cultural Landscape: An Introduction to Human Geography, 2nd ed. Columbus: Merrill Publishing. [Google Scholar]
- Ruuska, Alex K. 2014. Rock Writing Performances in the Great Basin: Ghost Dancing and the New Animism. Paper presented at the Society for American Archaeology Meetings, Austin, TX, USA, April 23–27. [Google Scholar]
- Sahlins, Marshall. 1985. Islands of History. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. [Google Scholar]
- Shimkin, Demitri. 1986. Eastern Shoshone. In Handbook of North American Indians, Volume 11, Great Basin. Edited by Warren L. D’Azevedo. Washington: Smithsonian Institution, pp. 308–35. [Google Scholar]
- Shimkin, Demitri. n.d. Letter to Whitley dated September 28, 1992, enclosing sections on Shoshone religion deleted by editor from original Shimkin (1986) manuscript. September 28.
- Shipek, Florence. 1985. Kuuchamaa: The Kumeyaay Sacred Mountain. Journal of California and Great Basin Anthropology 7: 67–74. [Google Scholar]
- Siskin, Edgar E. 1983. Washo Shamans and Peyotists: Religious Conflict in an American Indian Tribe. Salt Lake City: University of Utah Press. [Google Scholar]
- Slemmons, David B. 1957. Geological effects of the Dixie Valley-Fairview Peak, Nevada, earthquakes of December 16, 1954. Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America 47: 353–75. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Smith, Neil. 1984. Uneven Development: Nature, Capital and the Production of Space. Oxford: Basil Blackwell. [Google Scholar]
- Soja, Edward W. 1989. Postmodern Geographies: The Reassertion of Space on Critical Social Theory. London: Verso. [Google Scholar]
- Sparkman, Phillip. 1908. The Culture of the Luiseño Indians. Publications in American Archaeology and Ethnology. Berkeley: University of California, vol. 8, pp. 187–234. [Google Scholar]
- Spier, Leslie. 1923. Southern Diegueño Customs. Publications in American Archaeology and Ethnology. Berkeley: University of California, vol. 20, pp. 297–358. [Google Scholar]
- Spier, Leslie. 1930. Klamath Ethnography. Publications in American Archaeology and Ethnology. Berkeley: University of California, vol. 30. [Google Scholar]
- Steward, Julian H. 1929. Petroglyphs of California and Adjoining States. Publications in American Archaeology and Ethnology. Berkeley: University of California, vol. 24. [Google Scholar]
- Steward, Julian H. 1938. Basin-Plateau Aboriginal Sociopolitical Groups. Bureau of American Ethnology Bulletin 120. Washington: Smithsonian Institution. [Google Scholar]
- Steward, Julian H. 1941. Culture Elements Distributions: XIII, Nevada Shoshoni. Anthropological Records. Berkeley: University of California, vol. 4, pp. 209–359. [Google Scholar]
- Steward, Julian H. 1943. Culture Element Distributions: XXIII, Northern and Gosiute Shoshoni. Anthropological Records. Berkeley: University of California, vol. 8, pp. 263–392. [Google Scholar]
- Steward, Julian H. 1955. Theory of Culture Change: The Methodology of Multilinear Evolution. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. [Google Scholar]
- Stewart, Omer. 1941. Culture Element Distributions: XIV, Northern Paiute. Anthropological Records. Berkeley: University of California, vol. 4, pp. 361–446. [Google Scholar]
- Stoffle, Richard W. 2022. Native Hawaiians Believe Volcanoes Are Alive and Should Be Treated like People, with Distinct Rights and Responsibilities. UA@Work. December 22. Available online: https://uaatwork.arizona.edu/lqp/native-hawaiians-believe-volcanoes-are-alive-and-should-be-treated-people-distinct-rights-and#:~:text=As%20in%20most%20Native%20American,is%20like%20the%20Earth%27s%20mother (accessed on 20 May 2023).
- Stoffle, Richard W., and Maria Nieves Zedeño. 2002. The Concept of “Power” in Numic and Yuman Epistemologies. High Plains Applied Anthropologist 22: 172–93. [Google Scholar]
- Stoffle, Richard W., Kathleen A. Van Vlack, Hannah Z. Johnson, Phillip T. Dukes, Stephanie C. De Sola, and Kristen L. Simmons. 2011a. Tribally Approved American Indian Ethnographic Analysis of the Proposed Amargosa Valley Solar Energy Zone. Tucson: Bureau of Applied Anthropology, University of Arizona. [Google Scholar]
- Stoffle, Richard W., Kathleen A. Van Vlack, Hannah Z. Johnson, Phillip T. Dukes, Stephanie C. De Sola, and Kristen L. Simmons. 2011b. Tribally Approved American Indian Ethnographic Analysis of the Proposed Delamar Valley Solar Energy Zone. Tucson: Bureau of Applied Anthropology, University of Arizona. [Google Scholar]
- Stoffle, Richard W., Kathleen A. Van Vlack, Hannah Z. Johnson, Phillip T. Dukes, Stephanie C. De Sola, and Kristen L. Simmons. 2011c. Tribally Approved American Indian Ethnographic Analysis of the Proposed East Mormon Mountain Valley Solar Energy Zone. Tucson: Bureau of Applied Anthropology, University of Arizona. [Google Scholar]
- Stoffle, Richard W., Richard Arnold, and Kathleen Van Vlack. 2022. Landscape is Alive: Nuwuvi Pilgrimage and Power Places in Nevada. Land 11: 1208. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Stoffle, Richard W., Richard Arnold, Mauirice Frank, Betty Cornelius, Lalovi Miller, Jerry Charles, Gerald Kane, Alex K. Ruuska, and Kathleen Van Vlack. 2015. Ethnology of volcanoes: Quali-signs and the cultural centrality of self-voiced places. In Engineering Mountain Landscapes: An Anthropology of Social Investment. Edited by Laura L. Scheiber and M. Nieves Zedeno. Salt Lake City: University of Utah Press, pp. 99–115. [Google Scholar]
- Thériault, Robert, France St-Laurent, Friedemann T. Freund, and John S. Derr. 2014. Prevalence of earthquake lights associated with rift environments. Seismological Research Letters 85: 159–78. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Thrush, Cole, and Ruth S. Ludwin. 2007. Finding fault: Indigenous seismology, colonial science, and the rediscovery of earthquakes and tsunamis in Cascadia. American Indian Culture and Research Journal 31: 1–24. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- True, Delbert L., and Georgie Waugh. 1986. To-Vah: A Luiseño power cave. Journal of California and Great Basin Anthropology 8: 269–73. [Google Scholar]
- Van Eaton, Alexa R., Jeff Lapierre, Sonja A. Behnke, Chris Vagasky, Christopher J. Schultz, Michael Pavolonis, Kristopher Bedka, and Konstantin Khlopenkov. 2023. Lightning rings and gravity waves: Insights into the giant eruption plume from Tonga’s Hunga Volcano on 15 January 2022. Geophysical Research Letters 50: e2022GL102341. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Van Valkenburgh, Richard. 1952. We Found the Lost Indian Cave of the San Martins. Desert Magazine 15: 5–8. [Google Scholar]
- Van Vlack, Kathleen A. 2012a. Puaxant Tuvip: Powerlands—Southern Paiute Cultural Landscapes and Pilgrimage Trails. Ph.D. dissertation, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ, USA. [Google Scholar]
- Van Vlack, Kathleen A. 2012b. Southern Paiute Pilgrimage and Relationship Formation. Ethnology 51: 129–40. [Google Scholar]
- Van Vlack, Kathleen A. 2018. Puha Po to Kavaicuwac: A Southern Paiute Pilgrimage in Southern Utah. International Journal of Intangible Heritage 13: 130–41. [Google Scholar]
- Van Vlack, Kathleen A. 2022. Dancing with Lava: Indigenous Interactions with an Active Volcano in Arizona. In Anthropological Perspectives on Environmental Communication. Edited by Amelie Sjolander-Lindqvist, Ivan Murin and Michael E. Dove. Cham: Palgraves McMillan, pp. 29–53. [Google Scholar]
- Van Vlack, Kathleen A., Richard Stoffle, Evelyn Pickering, Katherine Brooks, and Jennie Delfs. 2013. Unav-Nuquaint: Little Springs Lava Flow Ethnographic Investigation. Tucson: Bureau of Applied Anthropology, University of Arizona. [Google Scholar]
- Van Wagtendonk, Jan W., and Daniel R. Cayan. 2008. Temporal and spatial distribution of lightning strikes in California in relation to large-scale weather patterns. Fire Ecology 4: 34–56. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Voegelin, Erminie. 1938. Tubatulabal Ethnography. Anthropological Records. Berkeley: University of California, vol. 2, pp. 1–90. [Google Scholar]
- Walker, Deward E., Jr. 1991. Protection of American Indian Sacred Geography. In Handbook of American Indian Religious Freedom. Edited by Christopher Vecsey. Chestnut Ridge: Crossroads Publishing Co., pp. 100–15. [Google Scholar]
- Walker, Merle F. 2007. Petroglyphs, Lightning, and Magnetism. Journal of California and Great Basin Anthropology 27: 52–71. [Google Scholar]
- Waterman, Thomas T. 1910. The Religious Practices of the Diegueño Indians. Publications in American Archaeology and Ethnology. Berkeley: University of California, vol. 8, pp. 271–358. [Google Scholar]
- White, Raymond C. 1963. Luiseño Social Organization. Publications in American Archaeology and Ethnology. Berkeley: University of California, vol. 48, pp. 91–194. [Google Scholar]
- Whiting, Beatrice B. 1950. Paiute Sorcery. Viking Fund Publications to Anthropology No. 15. New York: Wenner Gren Foundation. [Google Scholar]
- Whitley, David S. 1987. Socioreligious Context and Rock Art in East-Central California. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 6: 159–88. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Whitley, David S. 1992. Shamanism and Rock Art in Far Western North America. Cambridge Archaeological Journal 2: 89–113. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Whitley, David S. 1994a. By the Hunter, For the Gatherer: Art, Social Relations and Subsistence Change in the Great Basin. World Archaeology 25: 356–73. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Whitley, David S. 1994b. Shamanism, natural modeling and the rock art of far western North American hunter–gatherers. In Shamanism and Rock Art in North America. Edited by Solveig A. Turpin. Special Publication 1. San Antonio: Rock Art Foundation, pp. 1–43. [Google Scholar]
- Whitley, David S. 1998. Finding rain in the desert: Landscape, gender, and far western North American rock art. In The Archaeology of Rock-Art. Edited by Christopher Chippindale and Paul S. C. Taçon. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 11–29. [Google Scholar]
- Whitley, David S. 2000. The Art of the Shaman: Rock Art of California. Salt Lake City: University of Utah Press. [Google Scholar]
- Whitley, David S. 2001. Science and the Sacred: Interpretive Theory in US Rock Art Research. In Theoretical Perspectives in Rock Art Research. Edited by Knut Helskog. Oslo: Novus Press, pp. 130–57. [Google Scholar]
- Whitley, David S. 2006. Rock Art and Rites of Passage in Far Western North America. In Talking with the Past: The Ethnography of Rock Art. Edited by James D. Keyser, George Poetschat and Michael W. Taylor. Portland: Oregon Archaeological Society, pp. 295–326. [Google Scholar]
- Whitley, David S. 2008. Archaeological Evidence for Conceptual Metaphors as Enduring Knowledge Structures. Time and Mind 1: 7–30. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Whitley, David S. 2009. Cave Paintings and the Human Spirit: The Origin of Creativity and Belief. New York: Prometheus Books. [Google Scholar]
- Whitley, David S. 2014. Hunter-gatherer religion and ritual. In Oxford Handbook of the Archaeology and Anthropology of Hunter-Gatherers. Edited by Vicki Cummings, Peter Jordan and Marek Zvelebil. Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 1221–42. [Google Scholar]
- Whitley, David S. 2021. Rock Art, Shamanism and the Ontological Turn. In Ontologies of Rock Art: Images, Relational Approaches and Indigenous Knowledge. Edited by Oscar Moro Abadia and Martin Porr. London: Routledge, pp. 67–90. [Google Scholar]
- Whitley, David S. 2022. Culture, Memory and Rock Art. In Rock Art and Memory in the Transmission of Cultural Knowledge. Edited by Leslie Zubieta. New York: Springer Nature, pp. 25–46. [Google Scholar]
- Whitley, David S. 2024. Thinking, For Example In and About the Past: Approaches to Ideational Cognitive Archaeology. In Oxford Handbook of Cognitive Archaeology. Edited by Tom Wynn, Karenlee A. Overmann and Fredrick Coolidge. Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 339–69. [Google Scholar]
- Whitley, David S. n.d. Coso: Evolution, Culture and the Archaeology of Religion, Manuscript in preparation.
- Whitley, David S., and Tamara K. Whitley. 2012. A land of visions and dreams. In Issues in Contemporary California Archaeology. Edited by Terry Jones and Jennifer Perry. Walnut Creek: Left Coast Press, pp. 255–314. [Google Scholar]
- Whitley, David S., Johannes H. N. Loubser, and Donald Hann. 2004. Friends in Low Places: Rock art and landscape on the Modoc Plateau. In The Figured Landscapes of Rock Art: Looking at Pictures in Place. Edited by Christopher Chippindale and George Nash. Cambridge: Cambridge University, pp. 217–38. [Google Scholar]
- Whitley, David S., Joseph M. Simon, and Johannes H. N. Loubser. 2007. The Carrizo Collapse: Art and Politics in the Past. In A Festschrift Honoring the Contributions of California Archaeologist Jay von Werlhof. Edited by Russell L. Kaldenberg. Publication 20. Ridgecrest: Maturango Museum, pp. 199–208. [Google Scholar]
- Whitley, David S., Ronlad I. Dorn, Joseph M. Simon, Robert Rechtman, and Tamara K. Whitley. 1999. Sally’s Rockshelter and the Archaeology of the Vision Quest. Cambridge Archaeological Journal 9: 221–46. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Witze, Alexandra. 2014. Earthquake Lights Linked to Rift Zones: Steep geological faults most likely to host strange luminescence. Nature. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Zerubavel, Eviatar. 1999. Social Mindscapes: An Invitation to Cognitive Sociology. Boston: Harvard University Press. [Google Scholar]
- Zigmond, Maurice. 1977. The supernatural world of the Kawaiisu. In Flowers of the Wind: Papers on Ritual, Myth and Symbolism in California and the Southwest. Edited by Thomas C. Blackburn. Socorro: Ballena Press, pp. 59–95. [Google Scholar]
- Zielke, Olaf, J. Ramon Arrowsmith, Lisa G. Ludwig, and Sinan O. Akciz. 2010. Slip in the 1857 and Earlier Large Earthquakes Along the Carrizo Plain, San Andreas Fault. Science 327: 1119–22. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Zigmond, Maurice. 1980. Kawaiisu Mythology: An Oral Tradition of South-Central California. Socorro: Ballena Press. [Google Scholar]
- Zigmond, Maurice. 1986. Kawaiisu. In Handbook of North American Indians, Volume 11, Great Basin. Edited by Warren D’Azevedo. Washington: Smithsonian Institution, pp. 398–411. [Google Scholar]
Disclaimer/Publisher’s Note: The statements, opinions and data contained in all publications are solely those of the individual author(s) and contributor(s) and not of MDPI and/or the editor(s). MDPI and/or the editor(s) disclaim responsibility for any injury to people or property resulting from any ideas, methods, instructions or products referred to in the content. |
© 2024 by the author. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
Share and Cite
Whitley, D.S. Ontological Beliefs and Hunter–Gatherer Ritual Landscapes: Native Californian Examples. Religions 2024, 15, 123. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15010123
Whitley DS. Ontological Beliefs and Hunter–Gatherer Ritual Landscapes: Native Californian Examples. Religions. 2024; 15(1):123. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15010123
Chicago/Turabian StyleWhitley, David S. 2024. "Ontological Beliefs and Hunter–Gatherer Ritual Landscapes: Native Californian Examples" Religions 15, no. 1: 123. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15010123
APA StyleWhitley, D. S. (2024). Ontological Beliefs and Hunter–Gatherer Ritual Landscapes: Native Californian Examples. Religions, 15(1), 123. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15010123