- Pauma Complex
The Pauma Complex is a prehistoric archaeological pattern initially defined by Delbert L. True in northern
San Diego County ,California .The complex is dated generally to the middle
Holocene period. This makes it locally the successor to theSan Dieguito Complex , predecessor to the late prehistoricSan Luis Rey Complex , and contemporary with theLa Jolla Complex on the San Diego County coast.Pauma Complex sites have been identified primarily in the
San Luis Rey River valley and on the Valley Center plateau to the south of it.Archaeological traits distinguishing the Pauma Complex include:
* a high frequency of shaped manos
* the presence of finely worked small domed scrapers
* the presence of knives and points
* the presence of discoidals and cogged stones
* a predominance of grinding tools over flaked tools
* a predominance of deep basin metates over slab metates
* a predominance of cobble hammers over core hammers
* a low frequency of cobble tools
* a scarcity of cobble choppers and cobble scrapers
* a predominance of volcanic rock over quartzite as a source material for flaked lithics
* an extreme scarcity of obsidianReferences
* True, D. L. 1958. "An Early Complex in San Diego County, California". "American Antiquity" 23:255-263.
* True, D. L. 1980. "The Pauma Complex in Northern San Diego County: 1978". "Journal of New World Archaeology" 3(4):1-39.
* True, D. L., and R. Pankey. 1985. "Radiocarbon Dates for the Pauma Complex Component at the Pankey Site, Northern San Diego County, California". "Journal of California and Great Basin Anthropology" 7:240-244.
* Warren, Claude N., D. L. True, and Ardith A. Eudey. 1961. "Early Gathering Complexes of Western San Diego County: Results and Interpretations of an Archaeological Survey". "University of California, Los Angeles, Archaeological Survey Annual Report" 1960-1961:1-106.
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