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HomeMy WebLinkAboutSS 16-04; TAMARACK AVENUE PROJECT; CULTURAL RESOURCES PHASE I SURVEY REPORT; 2018-01-01 CULTURAL RESOURCES PHASE I SURVEY REPORT FOR THE CARLSBAD BOULEVARD AND TAMARACK AVENUE IMPROVEMENT PROJECT CARLSBAD, CALIFORNIA Prepared for and Submitted to: City of Carlsbad 1635 Faraday Avenue Carlsbad, California 92008 Prepared by: AECOM 401 West A Street, Suite 1200 San Diego, California 92101 (619) 610-7600 Authors: Lauren W. Downs, M.A., RPA Theodore G. Cooley, M.A., RPA and Shannon E. Foglia, M.A., RPA USGS Quadrangle: San Luis Rey 7.5" January 2018 Keywords: Tamarack, City of Carlsbad, Agua Hedionda, San Diego County, Tamarack Avenue Comfort Station, Carlsbad State Beach Carlsbad Boulevard and Tamarack Avenue Improvement Project Page i TABLE OF CONTENTS Section Page EXECUTIVE SUMMARY ........................................................................................................... iii CHAPTER 1 – INTRODUCTION ..................................................................................................1 Project Description and Project Area ..................................................................................... 1 Regulatory Setting ................................................................................................................. 2 Study Area ............................................................................................................................. 5 Project Personnel ................................................................................................................... 5 Report Organization ............................................................................................................... 5 CHAPTER 2 – PROJECT SETTING ..............................................................................................7 Introduction ............................................................................................................................ 7 Natural Setting ....................................................................................................................... 8 Physiography and Geology ............................................................................................8 Flora and Fauna..............................................................................................................8 Cultural Setting ...................................................................................................................... 9 Prehistory .......................................................................................................................9 Ethnohistory .................................................................................................................14 Historical Background .................................................................................................15 CHAPTER 3 – ARCHIVAL RESEARCH AND CONTACT PROGRAM .................................19 Records Search..................................................................................................................... 19 Previous Surveys ..........................................................................................................19 Previously Recorded Sites ...........................................................................................21 Historic Map and Aerial Archival Research ........................................................................ 21 Native American Contact Program ...................................................................................... 26 CHAPTER 4 – METHODS ...........................................................................................................31 Survey Methodology ............................................................................................................ 31 Pedestrian Survey.........................................................................................................31 Documentation .............................................................................................................31 CHAPTER 5 – RESULTS .............................................................................................................33 Identified Cultural Resources .............................................................................................. 34 Tamarack Avenue Comfort Station .............................................................................34 P-37-036871 .................................................................................................................35 CHAPTER 6 – SUMMARY AND RECOMMENDED MITIGATION MEASURES ................37 Summary .............................................................................................................................. 37 Recommended Mitigation Measures ................................................................................... 37 CHAPTER 7 – REFERENCES .....................................................................................................39 Page ii Carlsbad Boulevard and Tamarack Avenue Improvement Project ATTACHMENTS 1 Resumes 2 Records Search Maps (Confidential, bound separately) 3 Native American Contact Program A. NAHC Letter B. NAHC Responses C. Native American Contact Letter Package (Example) D. Native American Responses (Confidential, bound separately) 4 DPR Site Forms (Confidential, bound separately) LIST OF FIGURES Figure Page 1 Project Vicinity ....................................................................................................................3 2 Project Location ...................................................................................................................4 3a Project Area on Historic Topo, 1893 .................................................................................23 3b Project Area on Historic Topo, 1948 .................................................................................24 3c Project Area on Historic Topo, 1968 .................................................................................25 LIST OF PLATES Plate Page 1 Overview of project area at Carlsbad Boulevard and Tamarack Avenue, facing southeast (Source: Google Maps). .......................................................................................................1 2 Overview of the western edge of the project area, facing northwest. ..................................6 3 Sandy beach in the southwestern area of the project, facing south. ....................................7 4 Overview of sidewalk and landscaped vegetation on the eastern side of Carlsbad Boulevard, facing north. ....................................................................................................33 5 Tamarack Avenue Comfort Station, view towards west. ..................................................34 6 Historic Isolate P-37-036871, planview. ...........................................................................35 LIST OF TABLES Table Page 1 Summary of Previous Surveys within Records Search Limits ..........................................19 2 Summary of Previously Recorded Cultural Resources within the Records Search Limits .................................................................................................................................22 3 Historic Maps and Aerials .................................................................................................22 4 Native American Contacts by Affiliation ..........................................................................26 5 Archaeological Survey Results ..........................................................................................34 6 CRHR Eligibility of Archaeological Sites Identified in the Project ..................................37 Carlsbad Boulevard and Tamarack Avenue Improvement Project Page iii EXECUTIVE SUMMARY The City of Carlsbad (City) proposes to improve the existing Carlsbad Boulevard and Tamarack Avenue intersection approximately 1 mile south of Carlsbad Village and north of Agua Hedionda Lagoon. The City has identified the need to upgrade the intersection to improve pedestrian crossings and bus stop access, and to address narrow sidewalks and the absence of crosswalks. These improvements would enhance the flow of vehicle and multi-modal traffic, increase the perceived and actual safety of bicyclists and pedestrians, and improve the aesthetics of the intersection and surrounding coastal area. In accordance with applicable laws, ordinances, regulations, and standards, a cultural resources survey was conducted for the Carlsbad Boulevard and Tamarack Avenue Improvement Project in compliance with the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA) as implemented by the City as the lead agency for the project. This report presents the inventory of cultural resources identified within the project study area. A pedestrian archaeological survey was undertaken to identify cultural resources in the project area and to determine potential effects to these resources posed by the project. Fieldwork was conducted by qualified AECOM archaeologists and a Native American monitor from Saving Sacred Sites on November 2, 2017. One building, the Tamarack Avenue Comfort Station, is within the project area. It has been previously evaluated as eligible for listing on the California Register of Historical Resources (CRHR) and the National Register of Historic Places (Bevil 2016). No survey of the built environment outside of the project area was undertaken. Approximately 84 percent of the project area is within or along Carlsbad Boulevard and Tamarack Avenue, both of which are paved and surrounded by residences or commercial facilities. The remaining 16 percent of the project area consists of small, undeveloped bluffs and sandy beaches. Records searches were conducted at the California Historical Resources Information System (CHRIS) South Coastal Information Center to determine the previous survey coverage of the project area and if any previously recorded sites are present that may potentially be impacted by the project. The records search results indicated that 20 studies have been conducted and four cultural resources have previously been recorded within the 0.5-mile area surrounding the project. Six studies have been undertaken within the project area; no previously recorded resources are located within the project area. Research also included a review of historical maps and literature pertaining to the region and focusing on the proposed project area. The Native American Heritage Commission (NAHC) was contacted regarding information about cultural resources in the area. The NAHC Sacred Lands File Search indicated that cultural resources are located within the project site. Letters to Native American representatives identified by the NAHC were sent to solicit any additional information regarding cultural resources within the project area; responses have been received to date from the Sycuan Band of the Kumeyaay Nation (Sycuan), the Pala Band of Mission Indians (Pala), and the San Luis Rey Band of Mission Indians (San Luis Rey). The archaeological survey identified one isolated resource (P-37-036871) within the project area, not including the previously identified Tamarack Avenue Comfort Station. The resource consists Page iv Carlsbad Boulevard and Tamarack Avenue Improvement Project of two historic bricks dating to the early twentieth century. P-37-036871 was observed in an extremely disturbed context and is not likely in its primary context. Due to the isolated nature of the find, it is not eligible for listing on the CRHR. Two prehistoric sites, one historic district, and one historic building have been identified within the 0.5-mile radius of the project area. The prehistoric sites and historic district have not been evaluated for CRHR eligibility; it is unknown if the historic building has been evaluated for inclusion on historical registers. The coastal region of San Diego County retains a high level of cultural sensitivity for Native American tribes. Additionally, much of the project area was developed before CEQA was enacted. As such, there may be buried cultural resources within the paved areas of the project. For these reasons, it is recommended that all ground-disturbing work be monitored by a qualified archaeologist and a Native American representative. Should the project area change to incorporate new areas of proposed disturbance, cultural resources surveys of these areas will be required. In the event that any unanticipated buried cultural deposits are encountered during any phase of project construction, all construction work in the vicinity of the deposit should cease and, as a standard procedure, the lead agency will consult with a qualified archaeologist. Carlsbad Boulevard and Tamarack Avenue Improvement Project Page 1 CHAPTER 1 – INTRODUCTION PROJECT DESCRIPTION AND PROJECT AREA The City of Carlsbad (City) proposes to improve the existing Carlsbad Boulevard and Tamarack Avenue intersection approximately 1 mile south of Carlsbad Village and north of Agua Hedionda Lagoon. While most of the proposed project lies within the City of Carlsbad, a portion lies within Carlsbad State Beach, which is owned by California State Department of Parks and Recreation (State Parks). The City has identified the need to upgrade the intersection to improve pedestrian crossings and bus stop access, and to address narrow sidewalks and the absence of crosswalks. These improvements would enhance the flow of vehicle and multi-modal traffic, increase the perceived and actual safety of bicyclists and pedestrians, and improve the aesthetics of the intersection and surrounding coastal area. Specifically, the proposed project aims to improve multimodal use of Carlsbad Boulevard and reduce conflicts between automobile, bicycle, and pedestrian users. Carlsbad Boulevard is bound on the west by the State Beach and Pacific Ocean and on the east by a mix of residential homes, restaurants, rental properties, and businesses (Plate 1). Plate 1. Overview of project area at Carlsbad Boulevard and Tamarack Avenue, facing southeast (Source: Google Maps). Page 2 Carlsbad Boulevard and Tamarack Avenue Improvement Project AECOM was contracted by the City, as lead agency for the project, to conduct a Phase I cultural resources survey to assess potential project impacts to cultural resources as part of their compliance with California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA). The proposed project site totals approximately 6.6 acres and is located on 3.4 acres within City-owned right-of-way (ROW) and 3.2 acres within State Parks-owned land (Figure 1). The project is located on the San Luis Rey U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) 7.5-minute topographic quadrangle, partially within an unsectioned portion of the Agua Hedionda land grant, and partially within Section 7 in Township 12 South, Range 4 West (Figure 2). REGULATORY SETTING Cultural resources are defined as buildings, sites, structures, or objects, each of which may have historical, architectural, archaeological, cultural, and/or scientific importance (Office of Historic Preservation 1995). Significant resources are designated as “historical resources,” and are defined per Public Resources Code 21084.1 and CEQA Guidelines, California Code of Regulations Title 14 Section 15064.5 as follows: • resource(s) listed or eligible for listing in the California Register of Historical Resources (CRHR) (14 California Code of Regulations [CCR] Section 15064.5[a][1]) • resource(s) either listed in the NRHP or in a “local register of historical resources” unless “the preponderance of evidence demonstrates that it is not historically or culturally significant” (14 CCR Section 15064.5[a][2]) • resources identified as significant in a historical resource survey meeting the requirements of Section 5024.1(g) of the Public Resources Code (14 CCR Section 15065.5[a][2]) For listing on the CRHR, a historical resource must be significant at the local, state, or national level under one or more of the following four criteria: 1. It is associated with events that have made a significant contribution to the broad patterns of local or regional history, or the cultural heritage of California or the United States; 2. It is associated with the lives of persons important to local, California, or national history; 3. It embodies the distinctive characteristics of a type, period, region, or method of construction, or represents the work of a master or possesses high artistic values; 4. It has yielded or has the potential to yield information important to the prehistory or history of the local area, California, or the nation. Under 14 CCR Section 15064.5(a)(3), the final category of “historical resources” may be determined at the discretion of the lead agency. Carlsbad Boulevard and Tamarack Avenue Improvement Project Page 3 1 Project Vicinity Page 4 Carlsbad Boulevard and Tamarack Avenue Improvement Project 2 Project Location Carlsbad Boulevard and Tamarack Avenue Improvement Project Page 5 All resources nominated for listing must have integrity, which is the authenticity of a historical resource’s physical identity evidenced by the survival of characteristics that existed during the resource’s period of significance. Resources, therefore, must retain enough of their historic character or appearance to be recognizable as historical resources and to convey the reasons for their significance. Integrity is evaluated with regard to the retention of location, design, setting, materials, workmanship, feeling, and association. A resource must also be judged with reference to the particular criteria under which it is proposed for nomination. In addition to the historical resources described above, per Section 21084.2 of the Public Resources Code, the City must take into account the proposed project’s impacts on tribal cultural resources, separately defined in Section 21074 of the Public Resources Code. To determine whether the proposed project may have an impact on tribal cultural resources, the City is conducting government-to-government consultation with California Native American tribes that have requested such consultation per Section 21080.3.1 of the Public Resources Code. Results of this consultation will be documented separately by the City as part of the CEQA process. STUDY AREA The project site is composed of 3.4 acres of the City of Carlsbad’s ROW within portions of Carlsbad Boulevard, Tamarack Avenue, Sequoia Avenue, Redwood Avenue, and Garfield Street, and a 3.2-acre portion of Carlsbad State Beach (Plate 2). No direct impacts are anticipated to occur to archaeological or historic built resources beyond these boundaries. The work will not include any additional structures that may impact built resources, and no indirect impacts to the historic built resources are anticipated. Consequently, the pedestrian survey was limited to within the proposed project boundary. PROJECT PERSONNEL Andrew York, M.A., RPA, provided senior technical review for the project and Shannon Foglia, M.A., RPA, served as principal investigator. The survey was conducted by AECOM archaeologists Lauren W. Downs, M.A., RPA, and Kyle Ports, M.A, RPA. Richard Hernandez from Saving Sacred Sites served as the Native American monitor for the project. This report was authored by Lauren W. Downs, Theodore G. Cooley, M.A., RPA, and Shannon E. Foglia. Resumes of key personnel are provided in Attachment 1. REPORT ORGANIZATION Chapter 1 of this report provides a description of the proposed project, including the regulatory setting and project personnel. Chapter 2 is a description of the physical and cultural settings of the project. The physical setting includes hydrology, geology, flora, and fauna, while the cultural setting includes a discussion of the prehistoric and historic contexts relevant to Carlsbad. Archival research, including records searches conducted at the California Historical Resources Page 6 Carlsbad Boulevard and Tamarack Avenue Improvement Project Plate 2. Overview of the western edge of the project area, facing northwest. Information System (CHRIS), the South Coastal Information Center (SCIC) at San Diego State University, and the Native American Heritage Commission (NAHC), is documented in Chapter 3. Field and documentation methods, site types, and research issues are summarized in Chapter 4. Chapter 5 provides the results of the cultural resources surveys, a summary of each cultural resource, its preliminary significance recommendation for inclusion to the CRHR, and assessments of potential impact. Chapter 6 provides a summary and management considerations for the Carlsbad Boulevard and Tamarack Avenue Improvement Project. Chapter 7 contains the references for citations in this report. Attachment 1 is the resumes of key personnel on the project. Attachment 2 is the confidential results maps of the records searches undertaken at the SCIC. Attachment 3 is the results of the Native American contact program. Attachment 4 contains the California Department of Parks and Recreation (DPR) site forms for cultural resources identified during the survey. Once the report has been finalized, a copy will be sent to the SCIC as a permanent record. Once this report has been finalized and approved by the City of Carlsbad and State Parks, a copy will be sent to the SCIC as a permanent record. Carlsbad Boulevard and Tamarack Avenue Improvement Project Page 7 CHAPTER 2 – PROJECT SETTING INTRODUCTION The proposed Carlsbad Boulevard and Tamarack Avenue Improvement Project is located along the Pacific Ocean in the southwestern portion of the City of Carlsbad, California, in northwest San Diego County. The southernmost portion of the proposed project includes the bridge along Carlsbad Boulevard across the portion of Agua Hedionda Lagoon at the mouth of Agua Hedionda Creek. The western portion of the project area is within Carlsbad State Beach, which is owned by California State Parks (see Figure 2). The project area comprises approximately 3.4 acres within the City of Carlsbad’s public ROW along paved streets, and approximately 3.2 acres within Carlsbad State Beach along the low bluffs and sand. The majority of the project area has been paved. The undeveloped portion of the project area consists of beach sand and low bluffs (Plate 3). Land surrounding the project area is characterized by mixed development with ornamental landscaping and southern coastal bluff scrub communities within disturbed areas. Within the developed areas only ornamental landscaping plants were observed such as nonnative grass, palm trees, bird of paradise, shrubs, bougainvillea, ice plant, and other decorative flowers. Plate 3. Sandy beach in the southwestern area of the project, facing south. Page 8 Carlsbad Boulevard and Tamarack Avenue Improvement Project The project site is dominated by developed areas (approximately 84 percent of the area), including roads, landscaped parks, and parking lots. The remainder of the project area is characterized by beach sand and southern coastal bluff scrub communities with portions being disturbed (approximately 16 percent); no undisturbed areas were identified. One structure is located within the project boundary, the Tamarack Avenue Comfort Station. NATURAL SETTING Physiography and Geology The study area is situated on a low wave-cut marine terrace adjacent to the mouth of Agua Hedionda Lagoon along the north-central San Diego coast. The elevation in the proposed project ranges from approximately 62 feet above mean sea level (AMSL) in the area of the intersection of Tamarack Avenue and Garfield Street to 25 feet AMSL along Carlsbad Boulevard near the mouth of Agua Hedionda Lagoon. Current land use is a mixture of lagoon and beach-related open space, various types of commercial and residential development, and numerous paved roadways. The proposed project is located in an area containing several geologic formations, all of which date to the Cenozoic Era. The earliest of these are eroded exposures of the sedimentary Santiago Formation dating to the middle Eocene Epoch of the Tertiary Period from circa 56 to 38 million years ago. This formation variously consists of sandstone, claystone, siltstone, shale, and conglomerate. Most of the formations in the project location, however, consist of interfingered marine and continental sediments deposited, principally, on wave-cut marine terraces that date to the Quaternary Period, from circa 2.6 to 0.01 million years ago. In the project location, these sediments consist of poorly sorted, moderately permeable, reddish-brown, interfingered strandline, beach, estuarine and colluvial deposits composed of siltstone, sandstone, and conglomerate that date to the late to middle Pleistocene Epoch of the Quaternary Period, from 0.5 to 0.01 million years ago. Also present in the project location are more recent unconsolidated estuarine deposits, composed mostly of fine-grained sand and clay; and unconsolidated beach deposits consisting mostly of fine- and medium-grained sand. These deposits both date to the late Holocene after 0.01 million years ago (Kennedy and Tan 2007). Flora and Fauna Flora Prehistorically, the natural vegetation in the study area vicinity likely consisted of as many as six native communities: coastal sage scrub, riparian, oak-woodland, grassland, fresh water marsh, and salt water marsh. Prehistorically, the coastal sage scrub community would have covered most of the hillsides, ridges, and canyons in the coastal areas with interspersed areas of native grasslands (Stipa, Elymus, Poa, Muhlenbergia). Over the last 200 years, however, these natural communities have been disturbed by historic development, and today introduced grasses (Bromus spp., Avena spp.), foxtail (Hordeum murinum), mustard (Brassica spp.), and various shrubs are now present or predominate in many areas. Most developed areas have been landscaped and the vegetation consists entirely of introduced plants including lawn, nonnative Carlsbad Boulevard and Tamarack Avenue Improvement Project Page 9 trees, and numerous varieties of flowering plants. Prehistorically, coastal bluff areas were probably dominated by a mixture of coastal sage scrub and grassland plants. Commonly occurring native plants of the sage scrub community are California sagebrush (Artemisia californica), white sage (Salvia apiana), flat-top buckwheat (Eriogonum fasiculatum), broom baccharis (Baccharis sarothroides), wild onion (Allium haematochiton), laurel sumac (Malosma laurina), San Diego sunflower (Viguiera laciniata), golden-yarrow (Eriophyllum confertiflorum), sawtooth goldenbush (Hazardia squarrosa), yucca (Yucca schidigera, Y. whipplei), prickly pear cactus (Opuntia occidentalis), and scrub oak (Quercus dumosa), while grasses of the native grassland community consisted of Stipa, Elymus, Poa, and Muhlenbergia (Beauchamp 1986; Munz 1974). Prior to historic and modern activities, major drainages such as Agua Hedionda Creek contained extensive stands of the riparian community with plants such as sycamore (Platanus racemosa), Fremont cottonwood (Populus fremontii), coast live oak (Quercus agrifolia), and willow (Salix sp.) (Beauchamp 1986; Munz 1974). Riparian plants were also undoubtedly present in many of the nearby smaller well-watered tributary drainages. Large coastal lagoons such as Agua Hedionda Lagoon were surrounded by marshes and/or sloughs. Plants present in freshwater marshes include cattail (Typha), spike-rush (Eleocharis sp.), and bulrush (Scirpus sp.). Saltwater species include salt grass (Distichliis spicata), sea lavender (Limonium californicum), and pickleweed (Salicornia virginica) (Beauchamp 1986). Fauna Prehistorically, animal life in the study area and environs included large- to medium-sized mammal species, such as grizzly bear (Ursus horribilis) and black bear (Ursus americanus), mountain lion (Felis concolor), bobcat (Lynx rufus), mule deer (Odocoileus hemionus), coyote (Canis latrans), gray fox (Urocyon cinereoargenteus), badger (Taxidea taxus), ringtail (Bassariscus asutus), raccoon (Procyon lotor), and striped skunk (Mephitis mephitis). Numerous species of smaller-sized mammals were also present, including jack rabbit (Lepus californicus), brush rabbit (Sylvilagus bachmani), cottontail rabbit (Sylvilagus audubonii), ground squirrel (Spermophilus beecheyi), pocket gopher (Thomomys bottae), and several species of mice and rats (Burt and Grossenheider 1976). Other animals included predatory bird species such as red-tailed hawk (Buteo jamaicencis) and golden eagle (Aquila chrysaetos), a large variety of sea birds such as gulls and pelicans (Peterson 1961), and various amphibian and reptile species, including a large variety of lizards and snakes, as well as western pond turtle (Clemmys marmorata) (Stebbins 1966). CULTURAL SETTING Prehistory The following culture history briefly describes the known prehistoric cultural traditions in the vicinity of the project area. The approximately 10,000 years of documented prehistory of the San Diego County region has often been divided into three periods: Early Prehistoric Period (San Dieguito tradition/complex), Archaic Period (Milling Stone Horizon, Encinitas tradition, La Jolla and Pauma complexes), and Late Prehistoric Period (Cuyamaca and San Luis Rey complexes). Page 10 Carlsbad Boulevard and Tamarack Avenue Improvement Project Early Prehistoric Period Traditions/Complexes: The Early Prehistoric Period represents the time period of the first known inhabitants in California. In some areas of California it is referred to as the Paleo-Indian period and is associated with the Big-Game-Hunting activities of the peoples of the last Ice Age occurring during the Terminal Pleistocene (pre-10,000 years ago) and the Early Holocene, beginning circa 10,000 years ago (Erlandson 1994, 1997; Erlandson et al. 2007). In the western United States, most evidence for the Paleo-Indian or Big-Game-Hunting peoples during this time period derives from finds of large fluted spear and projectile points (Fluted-Point Tradition) at sites outside of California in places such as Clovis and Folsom in the Great Basin and the Desert southwest (Moratto 1984:79–88). In California, most of the evidence for the Fluted-Point Tradition derives from less substantial sites in the southeastern areas of the state along the margins of the Great Basin and adjacent Mojave Desert (Davis 1978; Moratto 1984:79–88), and from isolated fluted point occurrences elsewhere in the state (Dillon 2002; Rondeau et al. 2007). The isolated finds, however, are widely scattered, occurring in the Sierras (Moratto et al. 2011; Zimmerman et al. 1989), the central and southern Central Valley (Dillon 2002:110–128; Peak and Weber 1978; Riddell and Olsen 1969; Rondeau et al. 2007; Wallace 1978), and along or adjacent to the coast (Erlandson et al. 1987; Harrington 1948; Kline and Kline 2007; Simons et al. 1985; Fitzgerald and Rondeau 2012). Some finds have also been made on the Baja Peninsula (Des Lauriers 2008; Hyland and Gutierrez 1995). While an isolated fluted point fragment has recently been found in the western coastal mountains area of San Diego County (Kline and Kline 2007), the most well-documented sites dating to the Early Prehistoric Period in the San Diego area belong to the San Dieguito Tradition, now documented to be over 9,000 years old (Warren et al. 1998; Warren and Ore 2011). The San Dieguito Tradition, with an artifact assemblage distinct from that of the Fluted-Point Tradition, has been documented mostly in the coastal area in San Diego County as well as in the southeastern California deserts (Carrico et al. 1993; Moriarty 1969; Rogers 1966; Warren 1967; Warren and True 1961), with only sparse evidence for it discovered in the coastal area north of San Diego County (e.g., Sutton and Grenda 2012). The content of the earliest component of the C. W. Harris Site (CA-SDI-149/316/4935B), located along the San Dieguito River and approximately 20.9 kilometers (13.0 miles) to the southeast of the project area, formed the basis upon which Warren and others (Vaughan 1982; Warren 1966, 1967; Warren and True 1961) identified the “San Dieguito complex,” and which Warren later reclassified as the San Dieguito Tradition (1968). This tradition is characterized by an artifact inventory consisting almost entirely of flaked stone biface and scraping tools, but lacking the fluted points associated with the Fluted-Point Tradition. Diagnostic artifact types and categories associated with the San Dieguito Tradition include elongated bifacial knives; scraping tools; crescentics; and Silver Lake, Lake Mojave, and leaf-shaped projectile points (Rogers 1939; Warren 1967). While most of the evidence for the San Dieguito complex/Early Man Horizon derived from the near-coastal region of San Diego County, evidence attributed to the San Dieguito Tradition has recently been found in the Cuyamaca Mountains of San Diego County approximately 56.5 miles (91.0 kilometers) southeast of the proposed project area (Pigniolo 2005). The subsistence system or emphasis of the San Dieguito Tradition, while not as yet entirely agreed upon, is suggested by Warren as having an orientation towards a hunting rather than gathering economy, based on an artifact assemblage of primarily hunting associated tools, in contrast to the more gathering-oriented complexes that were to follow in the Archaic Period Carlsbad Boulevard and Tamarack Avenue Improvement Project Page 11 (Moriarty 1987; Warren 1967, 1968, 1987; Warren et al. 1998). Other researchers have interpreted the San Dieguito subsistence system to be possibly ancestral to, or a developmental stage for, the predominantly gathering-oriented “La Jolla/Pauma complex” of the subsequent Archaic Period (e.g., Bull 1983; Gallegos 1985, 1987, 1991; Koerper et al. 1991). Based on uncalibrated radiocarbon dates, Warren originally indicated this tradition to have begun sometime prior to 9,000 years before present (B.P.) and to have ended sometime between 8500 and 7500 B.P. (1967; 1968:4). Recent calibrations, however, have indicated these dates to be significantly earlier, extending to circa 10,000 B.P. (Warren et al. 1998:II-25; Warren and Ore 2011). Archaic Period Complexes: The Archaic Period in the southern coastal region dates from circa 8,600 years ago to circa 1,300 years ago (Warren et al. 1998). A large number of archaeological site assemblages dating to this period have been identified at a range of coastal and inland sites, which appear to indicate that a relatively stable, sedentary hunting and gathering complex, possibly associated with one people, was present in the coastal and immediately inland areas of what is now San Diego County for more than 7,000 years. These assemblages, designated as the La Jolla/Pauma complexes, are considered part of Warren’s (1968) “Encinitas tradition” and Wallace’s (1955) “Milling Stone Horizon.” In general, the content of these site assemblages includes manos and metates; shell middens; terrestrial and marine mammal remains; burials; rock features; bone tools; doughnut stones; discoidals; stone balls; plummets; biface points/knives; beads made of stone, bone, or shell; and cobble-based tools at coastal sites and increased hunting equipment and quarry-based tools at inland sites. As defined by True (1958), the “Pauma complex” aspect of this culture is associated with sites located in inland areas that lack shellfish remains, but are otherwise similar in content to the La Jolla complex and may, therefore, simply represent a noncoastal expression of the La Jolla complex (True 1980; True and Beemer 1982). During the latter half of the Archaic Period, beginning approximately 5500 B.P., a major shift in the subsistence system of prehistoric populations in the southern coastal region appears to have occurred. Artifacts such as dart points and mortars and pestles, which are essentially absent during the early Archaic Period, become increasingly present in site assemblages dating after circa 5500 B.P. This evidence in the archaeological record is indicative of an increase in hunting activity and of the gathering and processing of acorns for subsistence. The new, and subsequently increasing, use of these resources represents a major shift in the Encinitas/La Jolla/Pauma complex subsistence system in the southern coastal region (Warren et al. 1998). Similar to the San Dieguito complex, most of the archaeological evidence for the Encinitas tradition/La Jolla/Pauma complexes (Milling Stone Horizon) in San Diego County is derived from sites in coastal valleys, estuaries, and/or embayments that are present along the San Diego coast, south of the San Luis Rey River (e.g., Cooley and Mitchell 1996; Cooley et al. 2000; Gallegos 1995:200; Gallegos and Kyle 1988; Shumway et al. 1961; Smith and Moriarty 1985). To the east of the proposed project area in the inland mountains and upper-elevation foothill areas of San Diego County, evidence for sites associated with the Archaic Encinitas tradition/La Jolla/Pauma complexes are less common relative to the Late Prehistoric complexes that succeed them. McDonald (1995:14) has observed that “most sites in the Laguna Mountains can be expected to date from late prehistoric or ethnohistoric occupation of the region, and Archaic Period remains, while not unknown, are relatively rare.” A few sites that date to the Archaic Page 12 Carlsbad Boulevard and Tamarack Avenue Improvement Project Period, however, have been documented in the lower elevation, near-coastal foothills of San Diego County (e.g., Cooley 1995; Raven-Jennings and Smith 1999; Warren and True 1961). In the near vicinity of the project, three previously recorded prehistoric archaeological sites, CA-SDI-10478 (Gallegos and Pigniolo 1986), CA-SDI-13076 (Eighmey and Boughton 1993), and CA-SDI-10965 (Gallegos 1991) have been documented along the north side of Agua Hedionda Lagoon within 0.65 miles of the current project area. Site CA-SDI-10478 is located approximately 0.27 miles (0.43 kilometers) to the southeast of the project area and CA-SDI- 13076 approximately 0.23 miles (0.37 kilometers) to the southeast. While results from testing at both of these sites indicated limited artifact assemblages consisting mostly of a few lithic artifacts, debitage, and shellfish remains, neither site exhibited definite evidence of Late Prehistoric Period occupation and a radiocarbon date obtained from site CA-SDI-10478 indicated occupation circa 5,500 years ago during the middle Archaic Period (Gallegos and Pigniolo 1986). Site CA-SDI-10965, located approximately 0.62 miles (1.00 kilometers) to the east of the project area has documented as an early Archaic Period, habitation site (Gallegos 1991). Published results from subsurface investigations at the site produced four uncalibrated radiocarbon dates ranging from circa 7040 to 8390 B.P. and a substantial cultural deposit containing a variety of artifact types including manos and metates; lithic tools including hammerstones, bifaces, scrapers, choppers, and crescentics; bone tools and beads; and faunal shell and bone (Gallegos 1991). Elsewhere in the project vicinity, published results from subsurface investigations conducted at another site along Agua Hedionda Creek, CA-SDI-9649, located approximately 2.83 miles (4.55 kilometers) to the southeast of the project area, have also documented it as an early Archaic Period, La Jolla complex habitation site. The investigations at the site produced seven uncalibrated radiocarbon dates ranging from circa 7410 to 7940 B.P. and a substantial cultural deposit containing a variety of artifact types including manos and metates, lithic tools including bifaces, eccentrics, bone tools and beads, shell beads, and faunal shell and bone (Koerper et al. 1991). Published results from subsurface investigations conducted at another nearby coastal site, CA-SDI-603, located approximately 4.84 miles (7.80 kilometers) to the south of the project along Batiquitos Lagoon, have documented it as primarily an Archaic Period habitation site (Crabtree et al. 1963; Laylander 2003). The Archaic Period association for the site is documented by the predominate La Jolla complex content of the artifact assemblage and by three uncalibrated radiocarbon dates of circa 7300, 6250, and 3900 B.P. from organic samples obtained in investigations reported by Crabtree et al. (1963), and three more dates, of circa 7400, 8150, and 8330 B.P., reported by Laylander (2003). The investigations at the site revealed the presence of a substantial cultural deposit containing inhumations and a variety of artifact types including manos and metates, lithic tools including bifaces, discoidals, doughnut stones, stone balls, bone tools, shell beads, ceramics, and faunal shell and bone (Crabtree et al. 1963; Laylander 2003). Late Prehistoric Period Complexes: The beginning of the Late Period is marked by evidence of a number of new tool technologies and subsistence shifts in the archaeological record. Compared to the shifts noted for the middle and late Archaic Period, the ones occurring at the onset of the Late Prehistoric Period are rather abrupt. The magnitude of these changes and the short period of time within which they took place seem to indicate a significant change in subsistence practices in the area of what is now San Diego County (circa 1500 to 1300 B.P.). The changes observed Carlsbad Boulevard and Tamarack Avenue Improvement Project Page 13 include a technological shift from the use of atlatl and dart to the bow and arrow; subsistence shifts that include a reduction in shellfish gathering in some areas (possibly due to silting of the coastal lagoons); and the storage of crops, such as acorns, by Yuman and Shoshonean peoples. New traits such as the production of pottery and cremation of the dead were also introduced during the Late Prehistoric Period. Movements of people during the last 2,000 years can account for at least some of these changes. Yuman-speaking people had occupied Gila/Colorado River drainages of western Arizona by 2,000 years ago (Moriarty 1968), and then continued to migrate westward. An analysis by Moriarty (1966, 1967) of materials recovered from the Spindrift site in La Jolla indicated a preceramic Yuman phase. Based on this analysis and a limited number of radiocarbon samples, Moriarty concluded that Yumans, lacking ceramic technology, penetrated into and occupied what is now the San Diego coast approximately 2,000 years ago. Subsequently, approximately 1,200 to 1,300 years ago, ceramic technology diffused into the coastal area from the eastern deserts. While these Yuman speakers may have shared cultural traits with the people occupying the area of present-day eastern San Diego County before 2000 B.P., their influence is better documented with finds dating to after 1300 B.P., with the introduction of traits such as small points, ceramics, Obsidian Butte obsidian, and the practice of cremation of the dead. Based on research by Meighan (1954) and True (1970), two distinct archaeological complexes have been proposed for the Late Prehistoric Period in San Diego County. The Cuyamaca complex is based on analysis by True (1970) of archaeological excavations within Cuyamaca Rancho State Park and of San Diego Museum of Man collections. Based on the results of this analysis, True was able to define a Late Prehistoric Period complex for southern San Diego County that was distinct from Meighan’s (1954) San Luis Rey complex in the northern county area. The presence or absence, or differences in the relative occurrence of, certain diagnostic artifacts in site assemblages provide the principal distinctions between these archaeological complexes. Cuyamaca complex sites, for example, generally contain both Cottonwood Triangular style points and Desert Side-notched arrow points, while Desert Side-notched points are quite rare or absent in San Luis Rey complex sites (Pigniolo 2004). Other examples include Obsidian Butte obsidian, which is far more common in Cuyamaca complex sites than in San Luis Rey complex sites, and ceramics that, while occurring during the Late Prehistoric Period throughout the area of present-day San Diego County, are more common in the southern or Cuyamaca complex portions of San Diego County where they occurred earlier in time and appear somewhat more specialized in form. Both complexes have produced a variety of vessel types, along with rattles, straight and bow-shaped pipes, and effigies. Interment of the dead at Cuyamaca complex sites is almost exclusively by cremation, often in special burial urns, while archaeological evidence from San Luis Rey complex sites indicates both inhumation and cremation. Based on ethnographic data, including the areas defined for the Hokan-based Yuman-speaking peoples (Diegueño/Kumeyaay) and the Takic Shoshonean-speaking peoples (Luiseño) at the time of contact, it is now generally accepted that the Cuyamaca complex is associated with the Yuman Diegueño/Kumeyaay and the San Luis Rey complex is associated with the Shoshonean Luiseño/Juaneño. As defined by True (1958), the area of the proposed project is situated in proximity to the areas of both the San Luis Rey and Cuyamaca complexes with Agua Hedionda Creek/Lagoon providing an approximate boundary between the two (see below). Page 14 Carlsbad Boulevard and Tamarack Avenue Improvement Project Some researchers have observed that, in contrast to Archaic Period sites, Late Prehistoric Period sites attributable to the San Luis Rey or Cuyamaca complexes are less common in the near- coastal areas of the county. Gallegos (1995:200) has stated that, “for San Diego County, there is temporal patterning, as the earliest sites are situated in coastal valleys and around coastal lagoons. Late Period sites are also found in coastal settings, but are more common along river valleys and interior locations.” While no previously recorded prehistoric archaeological sites dating to the Late Prehistoric Period have been documented within 0.5 mile of the current project area, an archaeological site (CA-SDI-5213) located 1.8 miles (2.9 kilometers) from the coast between Buena Vista Lagoon and Agua Hedionda Lagoon, approximately 1.5 miles (2.5 kilometers) to the north of the project area, has been documented as a large village with occupation extending from the end of the Archaic Period, circa 2,800 years ago, through the Late Prehistoric Period to the time of historic contact, circa 300 years ago (Robbins-Wade 1988). Archaeological investigations at the site have produced a variety of artifact types including ceramics, metates and manos, mortars and pestles, arrow points, lithic tools, bone tools, shell beads, faunal shell and bone, and obsidian flakes (Robbins-Wade 1988). Robbins-Wade characterizes the site as having a “Luiseno complex” assemblage, which she contrasts with a typical San Luis Rey complex assemblage, possibly due to the location of the site near the coast, versus inland where more San Luis Rey complex sites have been documented (e.g., True et al. 1974). Ethnohistory The proposed project area is located within an area that encompasses the traditional territory of both Yuman-speaking Kumeyaay and Shoshonean-speaking Luiseño populations at the time of European contact. The southern boundary between the territories of the Shoshonean Luiseño/Juaneño and the Yuman Northern Diegueño (Ipai Kumeyaay) has been delineated as extending from the coast east along Agua Hedionda Creek as far as the northern tip of the valley of San José and Palomar Mountain (Bean and Shipek 1978; Kroeber 1925; Shipek 1995; Sparkman 1908) although other boundaries have been suggested. The Kumeyaay people were originally labelled Diegueño by the Spaniards, a term derived from their association with Mission San Diego de Alcalá. The term Diegueño was adopted by early anthropologists (e.g., Kroeber 1925) and was further divided into the southern and northern Diegueño. The Luiseño derive their name from their association with Mission San Luis Rey de Francia; this name was also purported by early anthropologists. The linguistic and language boundaries as seen by Shipek (1982) subsume the Yuman speakers into a single nomenclature, the Kumeyaay, a name applied previously to the mountain Tipai or Southern Diegueño by Lee (1937), while Almstedt (1974:1) noted that Ipai applied to the Northern Diegueño, with Tipai and Kumeyaay for the Southern Diegueño. However, Luomala (1978:592) has suggested that while these groups consisted of over 30 patrilineal clans, no singular tribal name was used, and she referred to the Yuman-speaking people as Tipai-Ipai. Other researchers have designated the Kumeyaay living north of the San Diego River as ’Iipai (Northern Diegueño), and those south of the river and into Baja California as Tipai (Southern Diegueño) (Hedges 1975:71–83; Langdon 1975:64–70). Now referred to by the Yuman language term “Kumeyaay,” these local indigenous populations were settled in permanent villages or rancherias at the time of contact with the Spanish in the late 1700s. Carlsbad Boulevard and Tamarack Avenue Improvement Project Page 15 An early ethnographic history of the Luiseños, authored by Phillip Sparkman, was published in 1908. Sparkman documents the Luiseño ethnographic territory as being from San Juan Capistrano to Agua Hedionda Lagoon to the north and south, and from Escondido to the coast on the east to west side. This territory was subdivided and occupied by different families or bands. One band could have multiple areas depending on the season such as in the mountains or valley areas (Sparkman 1908). Each band was typically restricted to their territory for hunting and resource gathering. Kroeber estimates that the Luiseño population teetered around 3,000 to 4,000 (Kroeber 1925) during the Mission era. The Luiseño tribe subsisted on seeds, acorns, oats, fruits, and berries, as well as meat caught by hunting and fishing (Sparkman 1908; Kroeber 1925). Their resources depended on the seasons as the Luiseño moved through the coastal, mountain, or desert zones (Lightfoot and Parrish 2009).The Luiseños lived in family groups known as tunglam or kamalum. More than 80 family groups are known today (Kroeber 1925). Chiefs acted as religious leaders of clans and directed religious ceremonies. This position was hereditary (Sparkman 1908). The Kumeyaay maintained a large territory from the San Luis Rey River on the north, Baja California to the south, the Pacific Ocean to the west, and Imperial Valley to the east. Kroeber estimates the populations as being around 3,000 during the Mission era. The Kumeyaay depended on seeds, acorns, nuts, beans, and berries. Large and small game was hunted with bows and arrows. Fishing occurred at rivers and the Pacific Ocean. Like the Luiseño, the Kumeyaay utilized different resource areas depending on the season. They sometimes inhabited larger villages during winter or summer months. They lived in patrilineal clans. These clans had access to their own land and resources (de Barros 2014; Kroeber 1925). Historical Background Coastal Southern California’s historic period began in September 1542 when Juan Rodriguez Cabrillo reached San Diego Bay as part of his expedition up the coast north of “New Spain.” Although the impact of that single event did not usher in instant changes in the region, it marks the opening of the area to new contact, colonialism, and cultural shifts. A brief discussion of the history of Carlsbad and its surroundings is presented below to provide a background on the presence, chronological significance, and historical relationship of archaeological resources within the study area. Spanish Period: It was 200 years from the time of Cabrillo’s initial explorations before the native peoples of present-day San Diego County felt the major impact of Spanish colonial contact. In 1769, Gaspar de Portola’s expedition was the driving force of Spanish Imperial expansion into Alta California, seeking suitable locations to establish military presidios and religious missions up the coast. Kroeber (1925: Plate 57) and Sparkman (1908) indicate that a native village, Palamai, was located somewhere near the mouth of Agua Hedionda Creek. It was noted by the de Portola expedition when they travelled through the area in 1769, although the name Palamai was not recorded by the expedition. Agua Hedionda Creek was a Spanish name given to the creek by de Portola’s men. The name translates to “stinking water” (Carrico 1977:36). Palamai was empty at the time that the expedition entered the area, but they noted an abandoned village near a group of alders. It is likely that the inhabitants had temporarily left the village to gather resources (Carrico 1977). Sparkman believed that this village was occupied by Page 16 Carlsbad Boulevard and Tamarack Avenue Improvement Project the Luiseño (Sparkman 1908). More is known historically about several Diegueño (Ipai) villages, documented along coastal estuaries. These villages were first noted by the de Portola expedition in 1769 as it traveled north up the coast, crossing several of the local drainages (Carrico 1977:34–35). Kumeyaay villages have been documented to the south of the project area near Batiquitos Lagoon, Encinitas, and San Elijo Lagoon. At each of these locations, the Spaniards interacted with a number of the local residents and found them quite gregarious. Some confusion, however, apparently exists in the records about the villages noted by the Spaniards at each of these locations. Built between 1769 and 1821, the San Diego presidio and the San Diego, San Luis Rey, and San Juan Capistrano missions stood, literally and figuratively, as symbols of Spanish colonialism, importing new systems of labor, demographics, settlement, and economies to the area. Mission San Luis Rey de España, located 10 miles north of Agua Hedionda Lagoon, was founded in 1798 at the ethnohistoric location of Tacayme (Johnson and Crawford 1999). It had the most vast land holdings of California’s missions. Horses, cattle, sheep, pigs, corn, wheat, olives, and other agricultural goods and implements became the basis of the area’s subsistence economy, and new methods of land use and building construction changed the landscape. In one year, 210 Luiseño Indians had been baptized at the mission. Father Antonio Peyrí, a missionary for 34 years at Mission San Luis Rey, advocated dispersed living arrangements and sanitary practices at the mission. Because of this, 1,909 Luiseño Indians were tied to the mission when it closed; this was the largest population at any mission (Johnson and Crawford 1999). Mexican Period: Mexico, including Alta California, gained its independence from Spain in 1821, but Spanish patterns of culture and influence remained. The missions continued to operate as they had in the past, and laws governing the distribution of land were also retained for a time. One major alteration did occur in 1835, when the missions were secularized and their large land holdings were made available to private citizens. While some large grants of land were made prior to 1834, secularization of the mission’s large grazing holdings ushered in the Rancho Era. Cattle ranching continued to predominate over other agricultural activities, and transportation routes through the region were developed to accommodate the tallow and hide trades, which increased during the early part of this period. One impact was the dissolution of the mission as a residential and labor center for territorially disenfranchised Native Americans. Many mission neophytes had little option but to work on the new Mexican ranchos. Communities living farther from the ranchos were able to maintain their traditional lifeways for a bit longer. These ranches put new pressures on California’s native populations, as grants were made for inland areas still occupied by the Kumeyaay, forcing them to acculturate or relocate farther into the back country. In rare instances, former mission neophytes were able to organize pueblos and attempt to live within the new confines of Mexican governance and culture. The most successful of these was the Pueblo of San Pasqual, located inland along the San Dieguito River Valley, founded by Kumeyaay who were no longer able to live at the Mission San Diego de Alcalá (Carrico 2008; Farris 1994). The majority of the Carlsbad area was contained within the Rancho Agua Hedionda land grant. This was a 13,000-acre ranch granted in 1842 that stretched from Vista south to Agua Hedionda Lagoon (Carlsbad Historical Society n.d.). It was owned by Juan María Marrón. He mostly used the land for cattle grazing but had some agricultural enterprises. Marrón and his family also built Carlsbad Boulevard and Tamarack Avenue Improvement Project Page 17 several homes on the property near El Camino Real and present-day Highway 78. He held the rancho from 1842 until his death in 1853, when ownership passed to his wife and children (Dyett & Bhatia 2015). American Period: American governance began in 1848, when Mexico signed the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, ceding California to the United States at the conclusion of the Mexican– American War. Land ownership was thrown into turmoil as Mexican land owners faced validation of their grants by the State Lands Commission. The cost of defending their claim and the evidence required by the State Lands Commission to prove title claims meant that many Mexican-era ranchos were claimed as public land that was open to American settlement. At the same time, events both east and west made American settlers eager to move westward. The California gold rush, the end of the Civil War, and the passage of the Homestead Act implementing the United States’ manifest destiny to occupy and exploit the North American continent brought people to California after 1848. Francis Hinton began leasing Rancho Agua Hedionda in 1860 and then fully acquired the Rancho in 1865 from Juan María Marrón’s widow. The Rancho continued to operate as a cattle ranch at this time. Hinton employed Robert Kelly to help him in this endeavor. After Hinton’s death, ownership of the Rancho passed to Kelly. Over the next few years, Kelly’s family established various homesteads on the Rancho. In 1880, Kelly allowed the California Southern Railroad rights to build their tracks through the Rancho (Carlsbad Historical Society n.d.). Railway systems began to connect the people and products of Southern California to the rest of the United States. Increased American settlement and claims on the land for residential, mining, agricultural, and ranching purposes in the second half of the nineteenth century meant that many remaining lands sustaining Native American populations were marked, surveyed, or even fenced as private, changing the landscape once again. Native American reservations were established, ostensibly to provide land for Native American populations, but these holdings made available only the poorest of subsistence lands, and forced many indigenous peoples to adopt a more sedentary life style, reliant on the Anglo economic system as an alternative to moving to a reservation (Carrico 2008). The 1880s saw “boom and bust” cycles that brought thousands of people to San Diego County. Carlsbad was located along the railroad and grew around it. However, lack of a fresh water source for agricultural undertakings slowed development of the city. During this time, John Frazier settled in Carlsbad near the railroad tracks in present-day Carlsbad Village. Frazier saw the importance of water and began searching for a water source (Dyett & Bhatia 2015). In 1885, he hired the Mull Brothers to dig a well and they were successful in locating a water source. Frazier’s men had located both mineral and artesian water. He started offering it to passengers on the train when they reached the station near Agua Hedionda on his property. This later became known as Frazier’s station (Carlsbad Historical Society n.d.). The Carlsbad Land and Mineral Company was created in 1886 and they planned the town around the station and prepared parcels for development. Carlsbad derived its names from the mineral water having the same qualities as water from Karlsbad, Bohemia. The healing reputation of Frazier’s water grew and soon many people were coming to Carlsbad to sample it (Dyett & Bhatia 2015). After 1890, expansion slowed in San Diego County, although some remained to form the foundations of small communities based on dry farming, orchards, dairies, and livestock Page 18 Carlsbad Boulevard and Tamarack Avenue Improvement Project ranching. Anchored by schools and post offices, these often sparse settlements were the basis of the area’s farming and ranching lifestyle of the late nineteenth century and early twentieth century. The influence of military development, beginning in 1916 and 1917 during World War I (WWI), moved much of the population away from this life. Carlsbad’s population grew from 100 residents to 1,800 by 1928. The city’s farmland developed too and avocado groves began appearing in the city. Latinos moved into the area during this time period as a way to escape the Mexican Revolution. Many of them worked on the farms within Carlsbad and lived in the Barrio neighborhood (Dyett & Bhatia 2015). U.S. Route 101 (Highway 101) brought the focus of the automobile to Carlsbad and provided substantial growth to the city. The highway was officially opened on June 21, 1925, but it had been in use for approximately 10 years prior to this time. The San Diego County Road Commission was founded in 1908 with intent to build a coastal highway from San Diego up to Orange County. The Commission was headed by influential San Diego leaders such as J.D. Spreckels, E.W. Scripps, and A.C. Spaulding (Arnold 2007). Construction began on the road following the route of El Camino Real with funds given by the County, the City of Oceanside, and the State of California. WWI, the 1915 Panama-California Exposition, and the 1916 great flood caused setbacks to construction. Prohibition brought more users to Highway 101. The Oceanside Blade reported in 1922, “It was calculated at times the cars passed at the rate of 700 or more an hour… the result was that the hotels, restaurants and rooming houses were swamped though as far as known, everyone was fed and cared for sooner or later” (Arnold 2007). Highway 101 continued to play an important role in Southern California transportation and growth until 1966 when Interstate 5 (I-5) was completed. I-5 utilized much of Highway 101’s original route, but some stretches were left untouched (Arnold 2007). When it was no longer a state highway, many sections of Highway 101 were renamed by the local communities it traveled through. In Carlsbad, it became Carlsbad Boulevard. In 1998, Highway 101 was named a historical highway by the State of California, but it is currently not listed in the CRHR or the NRHP (Daley 2003). A section of Carlsbad Boulevard is within the project area and, while it was considered during the archaeological survey, it was not formally evaluated. The setting of this section of road does not appear to retain integrity as it is surrounded mostly by homes built in the 1970s and there are no intact commercial enterprises that formed the original setting of the highway. The need to fight a two-ocean war during World War II (WWII) also resulted in substantial development in Carlsbad’s infrastructure and industry to support the military and accommodate soldiers, sailors, and defense industry workers. Camp Pendleton opened to the north in 1942 and this proved a boon for Carlsbad development. Residents of Carlsbad worked on the base and military families sought homes in the city. Celebrities, such as Leo Carrillo and Bing Crosby, became interested in Carlsbad around this time. They invested in real estate and built luxury hotels, such as the Royal Palms Hotel (Carlsbad Historical Society n.d.). Leo Carrillo purchased what was left of the Agua Hedionda land grant from Kelly’s descendants in 1937 and preserved the adobe house on the property. Following WWII, coastal residential densities spiked, supported by the north/south I-5 corridor. Numerous housing developments, including one on Leo Carrillo’s property, were built through the 1980s and Carlsbad expanded considerably (Dyett & Bhatia 2015). Carlsbad Boulevard and Tamarack Avenue Improvement Project Page 19 CHAPTER 3 – ARCHIVAL RESEARCH AND CONTACT PROGRAM This chapter outlines the results of records searches and archival research related to the project area. A search of records on file at the CHRIS SCIC was conducted for the proposed project to determine if any previous studies have been conducted and cultural resources recorded within the limits of or near the project area. Various archival sources were also consulted, including historic maps, documents, and photographs on file with agencies and institutions that may have information pertinent to the project area. A contact program was initiated with the NAHC to request a search of the NAHC’s Sacred Lands File and with Native American individuals and tribal groups to solicit information regarding known cultural resources. The City is independently undertaking government-to-government California Native American tribal consultation per Public Resources Code 210880.3. RECORDS SEARCH Archival research was conducted at the SCIC at San Diego State University. SCIC staff performed a records search for previously recorded sites and previous survey reports within the project area and within a 0.5-mile radius around the project area on June 15, 2016. Shortly after this time, the project went on hold and was subsequently redesigned within the original project footprint. AECOM archaeologist Lauren Downs conducted an update to the previous records search at the SCIC on August 2, 2017, since more than a year had passed since the previous records search. A portion of the project falls within Carlsbad State Beach within State Parks- owned land. An additional records search of State Parks’ records was performed by San Diego Coast District Archaeologist Nicole Turner on September 24, 2017; one additional resource was found during this records search. Previous Surveys The records search results identified 20 previous cultural resource studies within the search area (Table 1). Of these, nine are survey investigations (intensive pedestrian or inventories), four are testing or data recovery reports, three are environmental impact reports, one is a background study, one is records search results, one is a request for concurrence, and one is unknown. Of these studies, six are partially within the project area. A map showing the previous surveys within the search area is included in Attachment 1. Table 1. Summary of Previous Surveys within Records Search Limits Report Number Authors Date Title SD- 00535* Cupples, Sue Ann 1976 Oceanside Harbor and Navigation Project: Archaeological Survey Report SD-01028 Gallegos, Dennis 1986 Archaeological Test at SDI-10478 Agua Hedionda, Carlsbad, California Page 20 Carlsbad Boulevard and Tamarack Avenue Improvement Project Report Number Authors Date Title SD-01054 Gallegos, Dennis, Richard Carrico, and Jay Thesken 1983 Archaeological Survey and Test of the Windsong Shores Property SDI-10965 SD-01055 Gallegos, Dennis and Richard Carrico 1984 Windsong Shores Data Recovery Program for Site W-131, Carlsbad SD-01638 Woodward, Jim and George Stammerjohan 1985 Resource Inventory Cultural Resources San Diego Coast State Beaches SD-01752 Polan, H Keith 1981 Carlsbad Boulevard: An Archaeological Survey Report of the Right-of-Way for Proposed Bridge and Street Improvements Between Tamarack Avenue and Cannon Road, Carlsbad, California SD-04111 Larry Seeman 1982 Draft Environmental Impact Report Revised Parks and Recreation Element, Carlsbad, California SD-06629 Rosen, Martin 1999 Historic Property Survey Report Oceanside to San Diego-Rail to Trail SD-09361 Byrd, Brian F. and Collin O'Neill 2002 Archaeological Survey Report for the Phase I Archaeological Survey Along Interstate 5, San Diego County, CA SD-09569 Guerrero, Monica C., Tracy Stropes, and Dennis R Gallegos 2004 Cultural Resource Monitor and Test Report for the Encina Power Plant Project, Carlsbad, California SD-09571 Guerrero, Monica C. and Dennis R. Gallegos 2003 City of Carlsbad Water and Sewer Master Plans Cultural Resource Background Study, City of Carlsbad, California SD-11419 Bonner, Wayne H. and Marnie Aislin-Kay 2007 Cultural Resource Records Search Results for T-Mobile Candidate SD06919B (Tamarack HOA), 111 Tamarack Avenue, Carlsbad, San Diego County, California SD-11761 Dominici, Deb 2007 Historic Property Survey Report, I-5 North Coast Widening Project SD-12153 Robbins-Wade, Mary 2009 Archaeological Resources Survey, Agua Hedionda Sewer and Lift Station, Carlsbad, San Diego County, California SD-12693 Tang, Bai "Tom" 2009 Historic Property Survey Report for the Proposed Construction of a Second Mainline Track in the City of Carlsbad by the North County Transit District SD-12738 Hogan, Michael and Deirdre Encarnacion 2009 Archaeological Survey Report: Carlsbad Double Track Project Control Point Carl (MP 2293) to Control Point Farr (MP 2317) North County Transit District Mainline, San Diego County, California, Caltrans District 11 SD-13916 California Department of Transportation (Caltrans) 2012 Interstate 5 North Coast Corridor Project Supplemental Draft Environmental Impact Report/Environmental Impact Statement SD-14495 Caltrans 2013 Interstate 5 North Coast Corridor Project Final Environmental Impact Report/ Environmental Impact Statement and Section 4(F) Evaluation SD-14615 Caltrans 2013 I-5 North Corridor Project Supplementals SD-14757 Flandreau, Madeleine 2013 Request for Concurrence on "Section 106" Compliance and a Finding of "No Historic Properties Affected" for Vista/ Carlsbad Interceptor and Agua Hedionda Pump Station Replacement Project *Bold indicates study overlaps the project area. Carlsbad Boulevard and Tamarack Avenue Improvement Project Page 21 In addition, two reports were supplied by Nicole Turner from her search of the State Parks’ records. The first is an archaeological monitoring report authored by Nicole Turner in 2008. It documents the monitoring of trenching activities for the installation of the Tamarack Pay Station for the Carlsbad State Beach parking lot. No surface or subsurface cultural materials were observed. The second report supplied by Turner is a historical background study and determination of eligibility of the Tamarack Avenue Comfort Station at Carlsbad State Beach. It was authored by Alexander D. Bevil in 2016. The comfort station (also known as a restroom) is within the project area. Bevil concluded that the comfort station is potentially eligible for listing on the CRHR and NRHP. Previously Recorded Sites The records search identified five previously recorded cultural resources within the 0.5-mile radius of the project area (Table 2). Of the five resources, two are prehistoric temporary habitation sites, one is a historic district of residential buildings, and two are historic buildings. One building, the Tamarack Avenue Comfort Station, was recorded by the California Department of Parks and Recreation (Bevil 2016), and the SCIC does not have supporting documentation for the resource. The second building, 519 Chinquapin Avenue, is a historic address supplied to the SCIC by the California Office of Historic Preservation. As such, the SCIC does not have any additional documentation beyond the locational data. Only the Tamarack Avenue Comfort Station is located within the project area. A map showing the previously recorded cultural resources within the search area is included in Attachment 2. HISTORIC MAP AND AERIAL ARCHIVAL RESEARCH Historic USGS topographic maps were obtained from the online USGS Topographic Map Explorer, and historic aerials were accessed from Historic Aerials by NETRonline. Additional historic maps were provided by the SCIC. Available historic maps and aerials of the project area are listed in Table 3. The 1893 Oceanside USGS topographic map shows one road in the vicinity of the project area; it is unnamed but is most likely the precursor to U.S. Route 101 (Figure 3a). The 1948 San Luis Rey USGS topographic map shows several roads within or near the project site. These roads include U.S. Route 101 (now Carlsbad Boulevard), Tamarack Avenue, Sequoia Avenue, Redwood Avenue, and Garfield Street. A few structures are also shown along these roads. The 1968 San Luis Rey USGS topographic map indicates that by that time the project area appeared much as it does today, with extensive residential and commercial development. Page 22 Carlsbad Boulevard and Tamarack Avenue Improvement Project Table 2. Summary of Previously Recorded Cultural Resources within the Records Search Limits Site Number Primary Number Resource Type Age Description CRHR Eligibility Date Recorded (or most recent update) Relation to Area of Potential Effects CA-SDI-010478 P-37-010478 Site Prehistoric Short-term camp with shell midden and cobble base artifacts Not evaluated 1986 Outside CA-SDI- 013076 P-37- 013076 Site Prehistoric Shell and lithic scatter Not evaluated 1993 Outside n/a P-37- 029981 District Historic Eight mid-twentieth- century tract residential duplexes Not evaluated 2005 Outside n/a n/a Building Historic Historic address on file with the Office of Historic Preservation Unknown Unknown Outside n/a n/a Building Historic Tamarack Avenue Comfort Station at Carlsbad State Beach Eligible 2016 Within N/A= not applicable Table 3. Historic Maps and Aerials Map Name/Year Scale Source Historic USGS Topographic Maps Oceanside (1893) 1:62,500 USGS* Oceanside (1898) 1:62,500 USGS Oceanside (1901) 1:62,500 USGS San Luis Rey (1901) 1:125,000 USGS Southern California, Sheet No. 2 (1904) 1:250,000 USGS Santa Ana (1947) 1:250,000 USGS San Luis Rey (1948) 1:24,000 USGS San Luis Rey (1949) 1:24,000 USGS Santa Ana (1949) 1:250,000 USGS Santa Ana (1956) 1:250,000 USGS Santa Ana (1959) 1:250,000 USGS Santa Ana (1960) 1:250,000 USGS Santa Ana (1965) 1:250,000 USGS San Luis Rey (1968) 1:24,000 USGS Historic Aerials 1938 Not available NETRonline** 1947 Not available NETRonline 1953 Not available NETRonline 1964 Not available NETRonline 1967 Not available NETRonline Other Maps Official Map of the Western Portion, San Diego County, California (1872) 1:164,000 SCIC Historic Roads, San Diego County (1769–1885) 1:130,000 SCIC * USGS Topographic Maps accessed online via the USGS Topographic Map Explorer; http://historicalmaps.arcgis.com/usgs/ **HistoricAerials by NETRonline; http://www.historicaerials.com Carlsbad Boulevard and Tamarack Avenue Improvement Project Page 23 3a Project Area on Historic Topo, 1893 Page 24 Carlsbad Boulevard and Tamarack Avenue Improvement Project 3b Project Area on Historic Topo, 1948 Carlsbad Boulevard and Tamarack Avenue Improvement Project Page 25 3c Project Area on Historic Topo, 1968 Page 26 Carlsbad Boulevard and Tamarack Avenue Improvement Project As can be seen on the 1938 aerial of the project vicinity on HistoricAerials, the project site is mostly surrounded by disturbed agricultural fields and relatively undisturbed bluffs on the west. One area of development, possibly a farm house and building complex, is present along the east side of U.S. Route 101 (present-day Carlsbad Boulevard) between Tamarack Avenue and Redwood. On the 1947 aerial, this complex can be seen to have expanded with additional buildings present. By 1953, multiple homes can be seen along Tamarack Avenue, Sequoia Avenue, and Redwood Avenue. The 1964 and 1967 aerials show continued suburban expansion, as well as the construction of an artificial channel for Agua Hedionda to the ocean and the Carlsbad State Beach parking lot. Agricultural use of the surrounding area declines over the next 20 years as residential construction takes over. On the 1980 aerial, the project area appears much as it does today. NATIVE AMERICAN CONTACT PROGRAM An email was sent to the NAHC on May 31, 2016, requesting a search of its Sacred Lands File and a list of Native American individuals and organizations that might have knowledge of, or concerns regarding, cultural resources within the project area (Attachment 2). A response was received June 6, 2016, indicating that no Native American sacred places or sites are on file within the project site. The NAHC originally identified 26 Native American representatives, and letters were sent to these representatives on June 13, 2016. AECOM contacted the NAHC again on June 22, 2016, after it was noted that only a list of Kumeyaay representatives had been provided; AECOM believed this to be an error because the project area is within the Traditional Use Area (TUA) of both the Kumeyaay and Luiseño. The NAHC agreed that this was an error and re-sent a Native American contact list on July 1, 2016, with a total of 44 representatives (Table 3). Letters to representatives that were not included on the previous contact list were sent on July 5, 2016. A complete list of representatives contacted is presented in Table 4. Three responses have been received to date from the Sycuan Band of the Kumeyaay Nation (Sycuan), the Pala Band of Mission Indians (Pala), and the San Luis Rey Band of Mission Indians (San Luis Rey). Table 4. Native American Contacts by Affiliation Contact Affiliation Sent Response Clifford La Chappa Chairperson Barona Group of the Capitan Grande Initial Letter (06/13/2016) None to Date Sheilla Alvarez Barona Group of the Capitan Grande Initial Letter (06/13/2016) None to Date Ralph Goff Chairperson Campo Band of Mission Indians Initial Letter (06/13/2016) None to Date Michael Garcia Vice Chairperson Ewiiaapaayp Tribal Office Initial Letter (06/13/2016) None to Date Robert Pinto, Sr. Chairperson Ewiiaapaayp Tribal Office Initial Letter (06/13/2016) None to Date Carlsbad Boulevard and Tamarack Avenue Improvement Project Page 27 Contact Affiliation Sent Response Will Micklin Executive Director Ewiiaapaayp Tribal Office Initial Letter (06/13/2016) None to Date Virgil Perez Chairperson Iipay Nation of Santa Ysabel Initial Letter (06/13/2016) None to Date Clint Linton Iipay Nation of Santa Ysabel Initial Letter (06/13/2016) None to Date Rebeca Osuna Chairman Inaja Band of Mission Indians Initial Letter (06/13/2016) None to Date Frank Brown Coordinator Inter-Tribal Cultural Resource Protection Council Initial Letter (07/05/2016) None to Date Erica Pinto Chairperson Jamul Indian Village Initial Letter (06/13/2016) None to Date Ron Christman Kumeyaay Cultural Historic Committee Initial Letter (06/13/2016) None to Date Steve Banegas Spokesperson Kumeyaay Cultural Repatriation Committee Initial Letter (06/13/2016) None to Date Bernice Paipa Secretary Kumeyaay Cultural Repatriation Committee Initial Letter (07/05/2016) None to Date Mr. Kim Bactad Executive Director Kumeyaay Diegueno Land Conservancy Initial Letter (06/13/2016) None to Date Shasta Gaughen, PhD Assistant Director Kupa Cultural Center (Pala Band) Initial Letter (07/05/2016) None to Date Carmen Lucas Kwaaymii Laguna Band of Mission Indians Initial Letter (06/13/2016) None to Date Thomas Rodriguez Chairperson La Jolla Band of Luiseño Indians Initial Letter (07/05/2016) None to Date Gwendolyn Parada Chairperson La Posta Band of Mission Indians Initial Letter (06/13/2016) None to Date Javaughn Miller Tribal Administrator La Posta Band of Mission Indians Initial Letter (06/13/2016) None to Date David Thompson EPA Manzanita Band of Mission Indians Initial Letter (06/13/2016) None to Date Nick Elliott Cultural Resources Coordinator Manzanita Band of Mission Indians Initial Letter (06/13/2016) None to Date Leroy J. Elliot Chairperson Manzanita Band of the Kumeyaay Nation Initial Letter (06/13/2016) None to Date Virgil Oyos Chairperson Mesa Grande Band of Mission Indians Initial Letter (06/13/2016) None to Date Page 28 Carlsbad Boulevard and Tamarack Avenue Improvement Project Contact Affiliation Sent Response Shasta Gaughen, PhD THPO Pala Band of Mission Indians Initial Letter (07/05/2016) Received letter on 07/12/2016. The project area is not within Pala’s Traditional Use Area. They requested to receive project updates and results, as well as having a cultural monitor on- site during the survey and ground-disturbing activities. Robert H. Smith Chairperson Pala Band of Mission Indians Initial Letter (07/05/2016) Letter sent on behalf by Shasta Gaughen 07/12/2016. Temet Aguilar Chairperson Pauma Band of Luiseno Indians - Pauma & Yuima Initial Letter (07/05/2016) None to Date Bennae Calac Pauma Band of Luiseno Indians - Pauma & Yuima Initial Letter (07/05/2016) None to Date Charles Devers Cultural Committee Pauma Band of Luiseno Indians - Pauma & Yuima Initial Letter (07/05/2016) None to Date Mark Macarro Chairperson Pechanga Band of Mission Indians Initial Letter (07/05/2016) None to Date Paul Macarro Cultural Resource Manager Pechanga Band of Mission Indians Initial Letter (07/05/2016) None to Date Anna Hoover Cultural Analyst Pechanga Cultural Resource Department Initial Letter (07/05/2016) None to Date Bo Mazzetti Chairperson Rincon Band of Luiseño Indians Initial Letter (07/05/2016) None to Date Jim McPherson THPO Rincon Band of Mission Indians Initial Letter (07/05/2016) None to Date Tribal Council San Luis Rey Band of Mission Indians Initial Letter (07/05/2016) None to Date Cultural Department San Luis Rey Band of Mission Indians Initial Letter (07/05/2016) Received message from Cami Mojado on 07/13/2016 asking for the status on the project. Returned phone message on 07/14/2016. Ms. Mojado was informed that the cultural resources survey had not taken place and that AECOM would update her once one was scheduled and that we planned to use a Native American monitor from Saving Sacred Sites for the survey. Allen E. Lawson Chairperson San Pasqual Band of Mission Indians Initial Letter (06/13/2016) None to Date John Flores Environmental Coordinator San Pasqual Band of Mission Indians Initial Letter (06/13/2016) None to Date Carrie Garcia Cultural Resources Manager Soboba Band of Luiseño Indians Initial Letter (07/05/2016) None to Date Carlsbad Boulevard and Tamarack Avenue Improvement Project Page 29 Contact Affiliation Sent Response Joseph Ontiveros Cultural Resource Department Soboba Band of Luiseño Indians Initial Letter (07/05/2016) None to Date Cody J. Martinez Chairperson Sycuan Band of the Kumeyaay Nation Initial Letter (06/13/2016) None to Date Lisa Haws Cultural Resource Manager Sycuan Band of the Kumeyaay Nation Initial Letter (06/13/2016) A comment response form was returned on June 16, 2016. Ms. Haws would like a Kumeyaay monitor present for the survey and ground-disturbing activities. She also requests a copy of the report and the contact information for the City. Robert J. Welch, Jr. Chairperson Viejas Band of Kumeyaay Indians Initial Letter (06/13/2016) None to Date Julie Hagen Cultural Resources Viejas Band of Kumeyaay Indians Initial Letter (06/13/2016) None to Date On June 16, 2016, Sycuan returned a comment form to AECOM. Lisa Haws had several comments. She stated that a “qualified Kumeyaay Cultural Monitor” should be present for the pedestrian survey and during any ground-disturbing activities. She also would like an electronic or DVD copy of the final report, cultural resource or archaeological studies, and records searches. Finally, Ms. Haws requested the contact information for the City employee conducting Assembly Bill 52 consultation. Shasta Gaughen from Pala sent a letter dated July 12, 2016. She stated that the project area is not within Pala’s TUA. Ms. Gaughen requested that Pala receive project updates and results. A cultural monitor should also be on-site during the archaeological survey and any ground disturbing activities. Cami Mojado from San Luis Rey’s Cultural Department left a voicemail for Shannon Foglia on July 13, 2016, inquiring about the project’s status. Ms. Foglia returned the call on July 14, 2016. Ms. Mojado was informed that the cultural resources survey had not yet taken place and that AECOM would update her once one was scheduled. During the survey on November 2, 2017, AECOM retained a Native American monitor from the San Luis Rey band for the archaeological survey (Richard Hernandez). Ms. Mojado will also send AECOM a letter with the tribe’s comments on the project. No other responses have been received to date. Per Section 21084.2 of the Public Resources Code, the City must take into account the proposed project’s impacts on tribal cultural resources. The City is conducting government-to-government consultation with California Native American tribes that have requested such consultation. Results of this consultation will be documented separately by the City as part of the CEQA process. Page 30 Carlsbad Boulevard and Tamarack Avenue Improvement Project Carlsbad Boulevard and Tamarack Avenue Improvement Project Page 31 CHAPTER 4 – METHODS SURVEY METHODOLOGY Pedestrian Survey The pedestrian archaeological survey of the project site was conducted by AECOM on November 2, 2017. This included land owned by State Parks, which was surveyed under DPR 412A permit number 17-31. The survey was conducted in 5- to 10-meter parallel transects within portions of the proposed project area that were safely accessible. Crew members did not survey within the paved roads, as traffic was hazardous and visibility was poor due the road paving. Surveys were also limited on the bluff areas; as many portions of the bluffs were steep, it was determined unsafe to survey the bluff areas. Instead, surveyors closely inspected the bluffs from below on the beach. The surveyors used large-scale aerial field maps, as well as a Trimble handheld global positioning system (GPS) device with submeter accuracy to aid in the navigation of the project area. When archaeological sites were encountered, the survey crew determined the location of the site using the Trimble GPS unit. Site recordation included photographic documentation (site overviews and detail shots including diagnostic artifacts), site sketch maps as appropriate (recorded with Trimble GPS unit), artifact descriptions, and environmental context. No artifacts were collected. Documentation Cultural resources identified during the survey were documented or updated on appropriate DPR 523 forms. These included a Primary Form (Form 523A) and Location Map (Form 523J), at a minimum, for newly identified resources. Resource locations were determined using a Trimble GPS unit. All completed DPR site forms will be sent to the SCIC for the assignment of permanent numbers in the state inventory system. DPR forms are included in this report in Attachment 4 (confidential). Page 32 Carlsbad Boulevard and Tamarack Avenue Improvement Project Carlsbad Boulevard and Tamarack Avenue Improvement Project Page 33 CHAPTER 5 – RESULTS Project archaeologists Lauren W. Downs, M.A., RPA, and Kyle Ports, M.A., RPA, performed intensive pedestrian surveys of the Carlsbad Boulevard and Tamarack Avenue Improvement Project area on November 2, 2017. Native American monitor Richard Hernandez from Saving Sacred Sites was present throughout the survey. During the survey, ground visibility was primarily poor to fair (0 percent to 60 percent) as most of the survey area is paved over or obscured by vegetation (Plate 4). Thick brush and ice plant was found within a majority of the unpaved portions of the project and hindered visibility. Within the project area, the archaeological survey identified two resources, one of which was previously recorded. Both of the two cultural resources that could be potentially affected by the project are historic (Table 5). These consist of the Tamarack Avenue Comfort Station and the newly identified bricks isolate (P-37-036871). No prehistoric artifacts were identified within the project area during the survey. Plate 4. Overview of sidewalk and landscaped vegetation on the eastern side of Carlsbad Boulevard, facing north. Page 34 Carlsbad Boulevard and Tamarack Avenue Improvement Project Table 5. Archaeological Survey Results Site Number Primary Number Temporary ID Site Type Newly Identified during Survey? N/A N/A N/A Historic Building (Tamarack Avenue Comfort Station) No N/A P-37-036871 CT-ISO-01 Historic bricks isolate Yes N/A = not applicable IDENTIFIED CULTURAL RESOURCES Tamarack Avenue Comfort Station The Tamarack Avenue Comfort Station is a DPR-owned comfort station located at Carlsbad State Beach (Plate 5). It is a Contemporary-style rectangular building that was constructed in 1959 (Bevil 2016). The comfort station was designed by master architect Robert F. Uhte while on staff at DPR. The building sits on a poured-in-place concrete slab foundation and is constructed of cinder-block-shaped masonry units wooden support beams. It has a high-pitch shed roof that slopes downward towards the beach. There is a concrete landing on the northwest side of the building, and a concrete ramp that wraps around the north side of the building from street-level to the landing. A concrete stairway connects the comfort station and the beach-level boardwalk. Plate 5. Tamarack Avenue Comfort Station, view towards west. Carlsbad Boulevard and Tamarack Avenue Improvement Project Page 35 A historical background study and determination of eligibility was prepared in 2016 (Bevil). Bevil concluded that the comfort station is potentially eligible for listing on the CRHR and NRHP due to its association with a master architect and its association with one of the largest growth and expansion periods in the California DPR’s history. Bevil also states that the comfort station is “a rare, unique localized example of his design philosophy elevated to a higher artistic level than usually permitted by postwar economic constraints.” The Tamarack Avenue Comfort Station was visited during the current survey but was not documented due to the recent extensive documentation conducted by Bevil approximately one year ago. P-37-036871 P-37-036871 is a historic isolate consisting of two identical bricks from the Los Angeles Brick Company. The bricks were made sometime between 1900 and 1929, most likely at the Los Angeles Brick Company Plant No. 2 located on East Seventh Street in Los Angeles (Mosier 2015). The company initials are raised inside the rectangular frog on the face of the brick (Plate 6). The bricks measure approximately 83/8 inches in length, 4 inches in width, and 23/8 inches in height. Historic aerials do not indicate the presence of structures to the west of what is now Carlsbad Boulevard in the vicinity of P-37-036871 (NETRonline 2017). The bricks were observed in a layer of sandy fill soil that appears to have been deposited in the area. The isolate is not in its original context. P-37-036871 is not recommended eligible for listing on the CRHR. Plate 6. Historic Isolate P-37-036871, planview. Page 36 Carlsbad Boulevard and Tamarack Avenue Improvement Project Carlsbad Boulevard and Tamarack Avenue Improvement Project Page 37 CHAPTER 6 – SUMMARY AND RECOMMENDED MITIGATION MEASURES SUMMARY AECOM conducted cultural resources studies for compliance with CEQA as implemented by the City of Carlsbad. A pedestrian archaeological survey was undertaken to identify cultural resources present in the proposed Carlsbad Boulevard and Tamarack Avenue Improvement Project area and to determine if the proposed project may adversely affect any resources eligible for the CRHR. Within the Carlsbad Boulevard and Tamarack Avenue Improvement Project area, the current archaeological survey identified one historic building and one archaeological isolate; the building was previously recorded, and the isolate was newly identified. No prehistoric resources were recorded during the current archaeological survey. CRHR eligibility recommendations for these resources are summarized in Table 6 and described in further detail below. Table 6. CRHR Eligibility of Archaeological Sites Identified in the Project Site Number Primary Number Site Type CRHR Eligibility Recommendation Previous Evaluations N/A N/A Historic building (Tamarack Avenue Comfort Station) Eligible Evaluated by Bevil in 2016 N/A N/A Historic isolate Not Eligible N/A N/A = not applicable The Tamarack Avenue Comfort Station has been recommended potentially eligible for listing on the CRHR and NRHP due to its association with a master architect and its association with one of the largest growth and expansion periods in the California DPR’s history (Bevil 2016). No further evaluations of the comfort station were conducted during the current study. Newly observed historic isolate P-37-036871, which consists of two historic bricks from the early twentieth century, is not recommended as eligible for listing on the CRHR. Due to the disturbed context of P-37-036871, the isolate likely lacks a subsurface component. No associations with persons or events significant in our history can be drawn from the bricks. Additionally, P-37-036871 is a mass-produced “common brick” that was used to construct many buildings in the Southern California area (Mosier 2016) and therefore does not embody distinctive characteristics of a type or method, nor does it represent the work of a master. RECOMMENDED MITIGATION MEASURES While there are no prehistoric archaeological sites within the project area, prehistoric sites have been identified within the 0.5-mile radius of the project area, and the coastal region of San Diego Page 38 Carlsbad Boulevard and Tamarack Avenue Improvement Project County retains a high level of cultural sensitivity for Native American tribes. Additionally, much of the project area was built over before CEQA was enacted. There may therefore be buried cultural resources within the project area. To reduce the impacts to unanticipated resources to a less than significant level, the following mitigation measures are recommended: CULT-1: All ground-disturbing work in native soil should be monitored by a qualified archaeologist and a Native American representative. Should the project area change to incorporate new areas of proposed disturbance, cultural resources surveys of these areas will be required. CULT-2: In the event that any unanticipated buried cultural deposits are encountered during any phase of project construction, all construction work in the vicinity of the deposit should cease and, as a standard procedure, the lead agency should consult with a qualified archaeologist. The qualified archaeologist would coordinate with the City of Carlsbad’s construction manager and planning department to assess the buried cultural deposits. If the cultural deposits are encountered on DPR land, a DPR San Diego Coast District archaeologist would be contacted as well. If the discovery is determined to be not significant through consultation with City staff, and through consultation with the DPR San Diego Coast District archaeologist if applicable, work would be allowed to continue. CULT-3: If, in consultation with the City, a discovery is determined to be eligible to the CRHR, a mitigation plan should be prepared and carried out in accordance with state guidelines. If the resources cannot be avoided, a data recovery plan should be developed to ensure collection of sufficient information to address archaeological and historical research questions, with results presented in a technical report describing field methods, materials collected, and conclusions. Any cultural material collected as part of an assessment or data recovery effort should be curated at a qualified facility. Field notes and other pertinent materials should be curated along with the archaeological collection. CULT-4: If human remains are discovered during any construction activities, all ground- disturbing activity within 50 feet of the remains shall be halted immediately, and the County coroner shall be notified immediately, according to Section 5097.98 of the State Public Resources Code and Section 7050.5 of California’s Health and Safety Code. If the remains are determined by the County coroner to be Native American, the NAHC shall be notified within 24 hours. The NAHC shall identify a Most Likely Descendant, who will be designated to cooperate with the owner of the land on which the remains were discovered to arrange for the proper disposition of the remains, according to the NAHC guidelines for the treatment and disposition of human remains. CULT-5: Impacts to the Tamarack Avenue Comfort Station, which has been evaluated as eligible for listing on the CRHR and NRHP, should be avoided. If avoidance is not feasible, additional mitigation measures should be developed and implemented in consultation with the City of Carlsbad and State Parks. Carlsbad Boulevard and Tamarack Avenue Improvement Project Page 39 CHAPTER 7 – REFERENCES Almstedt, R. 1974 Bibliography of the Diegueno Indians. Ballena Press: Ramona. Arnold, T. K. 2007 Highway 101 Revisited in San Diego Magazine. Available online at http://www.sandiegomagazine.com/San-Diego-Magazine/January-2002/Highway- 101-Revisited/index.php?cparticle=2&siarticle=1#artanc. Bean, L. J., and F. C. Shipek 1978 Luiseño. In California, edited by R. F. Heizer, pp. 550–563. Handbook of North American Indians, Vol. 8. Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C. Beauchamp, R.M. 1986 A Flora of San Diego County, California. Sweetwater Press: National City, California. Bevil, A. D. 2016 The Tamarack Avenue Comfort Station at Carlsbad State Beach Historical Background Study and Determination of Eligibility. 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Sutton 1989 A Clovis-Like Point from the Southern Sierra Nevada, California. Journal of California and Great Basin Anthropology 11(1): 89–91. Page 48 Carlsbad Boulevard and Tamarack Avenue Improvement Project ATTACHMENT 1 RESUMES ATTACHMENT 2 RECORDS SEARCH MAPS (Confidential, Bound Separately) ATTACHMENT 3 NATIVE AMERICAN CONTACT PROGRAM A. NAHC LETTER B. NAHC RESPONSES C. NATIVE AMERICAN CONTACT LETTER PACKAGE (Example) D. NATIVE AMERICAN RESPONSES (Confidential, Bound Separately) ATTACHMENT 4 DPR SITE FORMS (Confidential, Bound Separately) CULTURAL RESOURCES PHASE I SURVEY REPORT FOR THE CARLSBAD BOULEVARD AND TAMARACK AVENUE IMPROVEMENT PROJECT CARLSBAD, CALIFORNIA CONFIDENTIAL ATTACHMENTS Attachments 2, 3D, and 4 Prepared for and Submitted to: City of Carlsbad 1635 Faraday Avenue Carlsbad, California 92008 Prepared by: AECOM 401 West A Street, Suite 1200 San Diego, California 92101 (619) 610-7600 Authors: Lauren W. Downs, M.A., RPA Theodore G. Cooley, M.A., RPA and Shannon E. Foglia, M.A., RPA USGS Quadrangle: San Luis Rey 7.5" January 2018 Keywords: Tamarack, City of Carlsbad, Agua Hedionda, San Diego County, Tamarack Avenue Comfort Station, Carlsbad State Beach ATTACHMENT 2 RECORDS SEARCH MAPS (Confidential) ATTACHMENT 3 NATIVE AMERICAN CONTACT PROGRAM D. NATIVE AMERICAN RESPONSES (Confidential) ATTACHMENT 4 DPR SITE FORMS (Confidential)