Talk:Ohlone/Archive 1

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Pov?

I think that there is a little pov in this part of the article. "When the Spanish missionaries arrived, they herded the Ohlones into missions, where they were decimated by European disease and overwork." I know this was what happend, I just dont think the word "herded" is the best word. I would like to say Sory for not posting in the talk page the first time. I was Sleep Deprived. -- Quinwound 17:53, Mar 9, 2004 (UTC)

I find this hard to believe

Their principal food was acorns, which they collected from the oak trees. (User:LegCircus; sig added by Jmabel)

No idea. Not unimaginable, but I agree it seems unusual. The article was originally contributed anonymously and gives no citations. Does anyone want to suggest some possible references about the Ohlone? Probably can be settled with some research.
Unusual? It's absolutely typical for California Indians. - Mustafaa 19:14, 5 Apr 2005 (UTC)
Yes, I too have read that this is very common. (By the way, Apaches also eat acorns. And piñon nuts. I think that there are some acorn stew recipes on the Internet somewhere. May be some for Miwok-Costanoan peoples too...) ishwar  (SPEAK) 23:49, 2005 Apr 13 (UTC)
finally looked up a recipe although one is Miwokan & another is just about California peoples in general eating acorns:
maybe someone can let me know how they taste (if you cook it before me). peace ishwar  (SPEAK) 23:23, 2005 Jun 7 (UTC)

To be clear on this oak trees are native to the SF Peninsula. Most were cut down for tannic acid. RWC was a big tannery center until the 1930s. There are a few old maps (Spanish/Pre-Mexican Rule) that showed the large acreage of oaks. Menlo Park was mostly oak at one time, but now the have to fight for every tree. It's also on the town logo. meatclerk 04:29, 19 August 2006 (UTC)

nice map

Very nice map. My applause! ishwar  (SPEAK) 23:51, 2005 Apr 13 (UTC)

Thanks! It's available in Arabic too :). I'm not 100% confident of the Karkin and Chochenyo boundaries, which sources seem to disagree on, so tell me if you spot anything fishy. Saclan was once thought to be Costanoan, but turned out to be Miwok. - Mustafaa 09:26, 14 Apr 2005 (UTC)

Name issue

The Costanoans do not all identify with the name "Ohlone", which actually designated a specific tribe or triblet that occupied land on the Pacific Coast west of the southern end of San Francisco Bay (see A Time of Little Choice by R. Milliken). I have had discussions with Costanoan people from the Monterey Bay area and from the north bay who are irritated by the lack of geographical and cultural discrimination reflected by the use of "Ohlone" as a comprehensive name for the entire language and its speakers. They are generally content with "Costanoan" which is a broad term that does not single out a specific smaller political unit at the expense of others.

Sounds sensible to me. What would you say the balance is - 50/50 for each? Or more preferring one to the other? - Mustafaa 22:00, 7 Jun 2005 (UTC)
On this issue, the correction is:
I am currently reviewing a statement by Alan Hynding in his book, From Frontier to Suburb: The Story of The San Mateo Peninsula, pg. 9. He writes:

The careless use of words like Oholone and Costano reveals the general confusion and ignorance surrounding the history and culture of San Mateo (County) Indians, (...)

Just before that he writes:

South of Half Moon Bay, (...) Father Juan Crespi (...) describes the local Olxan (Ohlone) villages ...

Please see my discussion on this on Talk:Castro_Valley,_California#External_Links:_Commerical_or_Not and Talk:Castro_Valley,_California#Continue Ohlone meatclerk 07:31, 8 August 2006 (UTC)


Going to label unreliable

I'm ready to label this unreliable. In addition, the reference "The Ohlone Way" is also unreliable. There is plenty of good information to show the errors on this article, but I don't have the time to fix it. Hence, the label. Anyone else? meatclerk 04:35, 19 August 2006 (UTC)

On what basis do you label "The Ohlone Way" unreliable? This is a book that has been endorsed by:
  • The Pacific Sun
  • The San Francisco Chronicle
  • American Anthropologist
Let me start off by saying that I am no expert, but to make a blanket statement, disparaging another's work, without evidence is not OK. Maybe Margolin is right, maybe he is wrong. I don't know that and cannot judge him. Perhaps you have another source that disagrees with Margolin, but until there is a consensus, both views should have equal weight.--imars 07:15, 13 September 2006 (UTC)
Thanks for your comment. I note there is a revised edition of the book, "The Ohlone Way". I withdraw that remark until I have had time to review the new book. Thanks meatclerk 08:00, 13 September 2006 (UTC)

Conflicting References

Verification complete

Did not act jointly?

Round Up of Issues

New material

Addressing Discrepencies

Scanning Status

Review of Population

Revert of History section on Oct. 2, 2006

October 3

Possible Outline

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