HomeMy WebLinkAboutAppendix C_Cultural ReportJanuary 2023
CULTURAL RESOURCES ASSESSMENT
PUBLIC S TORA GE REDEVELOPMENT PROJECT
FONTANA, SAN BERNARDINO COUNTY, CALIFORNIA
January 2023
CULTURAL RESOURCES ASSESSMENT
PUBLIC STORAGE REDEVELOPMENT PROJECT
FONTANA, SAN BERNARDINO COUNTY, CALIFORNIA
Prepared for:
Aaron Anderson
Public Storage
701 Western Avenue
Glendale, California 91201
Prepared by:
Riordan Goodwin, RA
LSA Associates, Inc.
1500 Iowa Avenue, Suite 200
Riverside, California 92507
(951)781-9310
LSA Project No. PUB2202
National Archaeological Database Information:
Type of Study: Reconnaissance Survey
Sites Recorded: None
USGS 7.5' Quadrangle: Fontana, California
Acreage: ~5.3 acres
Keywords: Phase I, negative results, no monitoring recommended.
CULTURAL RESOURCES ASSESSMENT JANUARY 2023 FONTANA PUBLIC STORAGE REDEVELOPMENT PROJECT FONTANA, CALIFORNIA
\\lsaazfiles.file.core.windows.net\projects\PUB2202\Technical Studies\Cultural\Report\PUB2202 CRA.docx (01/06/23) i
MANAGEMENT SUMMARY
Public Storage retained LSA to conduct a cultural resources assessment for the Public Storage
Redevelopment Project in Fontana, San Bernardino County, California. This cultural resources
assessment was completed pursuant to the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA).
A cultural resources records search, additional research, and a field survey were conducted for the
project area. No cultural resources are documented within the project parcel, and none were
identified within the unpaved/developed portion by the survey. No prehistoric resources were
documented within a mile, and sensitivity for in situ undocumented subsurface resources is low.
Therefore, no further investigation or archaeological monitoring is recommended.
In the event previously undocumented archaeological resources are identified during earthmoving
activities, further work in the area should be halted until the nature and significance of the find can
be assessed by a qualified archaeologist.
If human remains are encountered, State Health and Safety Code Section 7050.5 states that no
further disturbance shall occur until the County Coroner has made a determination of origin and
disposition pursuant to State Public Resources Code Section 5097.98. The County Coroner must be
notified of the find immediately. If the remains are determined to be Native American, the County
Coroner will notify the Native American Heritage Commission (NAHC), which will determine and
notify a Most Likely Descendant (MLD). With the permission of the landowner or his/her authorized
representative, the MLD may inspect the site of the discovery. The MLD shall complete the
inspection and make recommendations or preferences for treatment within 48 hours of being
granted access to the site. The MLD recommendations may include scientific removal and
nondestructive analysis of human remains and items associated with Native American burials,
preservation of Native American human remains and associated items in place, relinquishment of
Native American human remains and associated items to the descendants for treatment, or any
other culturally appropriate treatment.
CULTURAL RESOURCES ASSESSMENT JANUARY 2023 FONTANA PUBLIC STORAGE REDEVELOPMENT PROJECT FONTANA, CALIFORNIA
\\lsaazfiles.file.core.windows.net\projects\PUB2202\Technical Studies\Cultural\Report\PUB2202 CRA.docx (01/06/23) ii
TABLE OF CONTENTS
MANAGEMENT SUMMARY ..................................................................................................................... i
TABLE OF CONTENTS ............................................................................................................................. iii
MANAGEMENT SUMMARY .......................................................................................... I
INTRODUCTION .......................................................................................................... 1
NATURAL SETTING ...................................................................................................... 3
Climate and Watershed ................................................................................................................. 3
Biology ........................................................................................................................................... 3
Geology ......................................................................................................................................... 3
CULTURAL SETTING ..................................................................................................... 4
Prehistory ...................................................................................................................................... 4
Ethnography .................................................................................................................................. 4
Cahuilla ............................................................................................................................................... 4
Gabrielino ........................................................................................................................................... 5
Serrano ............................................................................................................................................... 5 History ........................................................................................................................................... 6
San Bernardino County ....................................................................................................................... 6
Fontana ............................................................................................................................................... 6
METHODS ................................................................................................................... 8
Record Search ................................................................................................................................ 8
Additional Research ...................................................................................................................... 8
Sacred Lands File Search ............................................................................................................... 8
Field Survey ................................................................................................................................... 8
RESULTS ..................................................................................................................... 9
Record Search ................................................................................................................................ 9
Additional Research ...................................................................................................................... 9
Sacred Lands File Search ............................................................................................................... 9
Field Survey ................................................................................................................................... 9
FINDINGS AND RECOMMENDATIONS ........................................................................ 10
REFERENCES ............................................................................................................. 11
APPENDICES
A: RECORD SEARCH BIBLIOGRAPHY
B: SACRED LANDS FILE SEARCH RESULTS
CULTURAL RESOURCES ASSESSMENT JANUARY 2023 FONTANA PUBLIC STORAGE REDEVELOPMENT PROJECT FONTANA, CALIFORNIA
\\lsaazfiles.file.core.windows.net\projects\PUB2202\Technical Studies\Cultural\Report\PUB2202 CRA.docx (01/06/23) iii
FIGURES AND TABLES
FIGURES
Figure 1: Project Regional and Project Location .................................................................................... 2
TABLES
Table A: Cultural Resources Within 1 Mile ............................................................................................. 9
CULTURAL RESOURCES ASSESSMENT JANUARY 2023 FONTANA PUBLIC STORAGE REDEVELOPMENT PROJECT FONTANA, CALIFORNIA
\\lsaazfiles.file.core.windows.net\projects\PUB2202\Technical Studies\Cultural\Report\PUB2202 CRA.docx (01/06/23) 1
INTRODUCTION
LSA was retained by Public Storage to conduct a cultural resources assessment for the proposed
Public Storage Redevelopment Project in the City of Fontana, San Bernardino County, California. This
assessment was completed pursuant to the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA), Public
Resources Code Chapter 2.6, Section 21083.2, and California Code of Regulations Title 14, Chapter 3,
Article 5, Section 15064.5. The research and field surveys were conducted to determine whether the
proposed project could adversely affect any resources considered historical resources per CEQA. The
project area (Assessor’s Parcel Numbers [APN] 0194-351-12, -16, 0251-211-22) is at 17173 Valley
Boulevard between Sierra Avenue and Palmetto Avenue. The project is depicted on the United
States Geological Survey (USGS) Fontana, California topographic quadrangle map in Township 1
South, Range 5 West in Section 20, San Bernardino Baseline and Meridian (USGS 1980; Figure 1).
The project area is a currently developed 5.3-acre lot (office and industrial/warehouse). The
proposed project will demolish 18,272 square feet (sf) of office and industrial/warehouse within
four buildings on site and construct a three-story self-storage facility (109,566 sf) and new office
space (1,257 sf).
304.80
SOURCE: USGS 7.5' Quad - Fontana (1980), CA
I:\PUB2201\GIS\MXD\ProjLoc_USGS.mxd (10/18/2022)
FIGURE 1
Public Storage Redevelopment Project
Project Location and Vicinity
0 1000 2000
FEET
LEGEND
Project Location
SanBernardinoCounty
RiversideCounty
ÃÃ330
ÃÃ38
ÃÃ71
ÃÃ18 ÃÃ173
ÃÃ210
ÃÃ60
ÃÃ91
Project Location
§¨¦15
§¨¦215
§¨¦10
Project Vicinity
CULTURAL RESOURCES ASSESSMENT JANUARY 2023 FONTANA PUBLIC STORAGE REDEVELOPMENT PROJECT FONTANA, CALIFORNIA
\\lsaazfiles.file.core.windows.net\projects\PUB2202\Technical Studies\Cultural\Report\PUB2202 CRA.docx (01/06/23) 3
NATURAL SETTING
CLIMATE AND WATERSHED
The project region is characterized by a temperate climate, with dry, hot summers and moderate
winters. Rainfall ranges from 12 to 16 inches annually (Beck and Haase 1974). Precipitation usually
occurs in the form of winter rain, with warm monsoonal showers in summer. The project area is
approximately 1.5 miles east of the former course of East Etiwanda Creek (prior to channelization),
which drains south.
BIOLOGY
At an average elevation of approximately 1,260 feet, the project is within the Lower Sonoran Life
Zone of California (Schoenherr 1992), which ranges from below sea level to 3,500 feet in elevation.
Species such as datura, foxtail brome, mustard, along with xeric grasses were noted on the property.
Extensive fauna are known locally, including many endemic species of reptiles, birds, and insects.
GEOLOGY
The project area is located at the northern end of the Peninsular Ranges Geomorphic Province, a
900-mile-long northwest-southeast trending structural block that extends from the Transverse
Ranges to the tip of Baja California and includes the Los Angeles Basin (California Geological Survey
2002; Norris and Webb 1976). The province is approximately 225 miles wide, extending from the
Colorado Desert in the east, across the continental shelf to the Southern Channel Islands (Santa
Barbara, San Nicolas, Santa Catalina, and San Clemente) in the west (Sharp 1976). This region is
characterized by a series of mountain ranges separated by northwest-trending valleys subparallel to
faults branching from the San Andreas Fault. The geology of this province is similar to that of the
Sierra Nevada, with numerous rock outcroppings useful to the Native Americans for resource
milling, shelter, and ceremonial art.
CULTURAL RESOURCES ASSESSMENT JANUARY 2023 FONTANA PUBLIC STORAGE REDEVELOPMENT PROJECT FONTANA, CALIFORNIA
\\lsaazfiles.file.core.windows.net\projects\PUB2202\Technical Studies\Cultural\Report\PUB2202 CRA.docx (01/06/23) 4
CULTURAL SETTING
PREHISTORY
Chronologies of prehistoric cultural change in Southern California have been attempted numerous
times, and several are reviewed in Moratto (2004). No single description is universally accepted as
the various chronologies are based primarily on material developments identified by researchers
familiar with sites in a particular region and variation exists essentially due to the differences in
those items found at the sites. Small differences occur over time and space, which combine to form
patterns that are variously interpreted.
Currently, two primary regional culture chronology syntheses are commonly referenced in the
archaeological literature. The first, Wallace (1955), describes four cultural horizons or time periods:
Horizon I – Early Man (9000–6000 BC), Horizon II – Milling Stone Assemblages (6000–3000 BC),
Horizon III – Intermediate Cultures (3000 BC–AD 500), and Horizon IV – Late Prehistoric Cultures (AD
500–historic contact). This chronology was refined (Wallace 1978) using absolute chronological
dates obtained after 1955.
The second cultural chronology (Warren 1968) is based broadly on Southern California prehistoric
cultures and was also revised (Warren 1984; Warren and Crabtree 1986). Warren’s (1984)
chronology includes five periods in prehistory: Lake Mojave (7000–5000 BC), Pinto (5000–2000 BC),
Gypsum (2000 BC–AD 500), Saratoga Springs (AD 500–1200), and Protohistoric (AD 1200–historic
contact). Changes in settlement pattern and subsistence focus are viewed as cultural adaptations to
a changing environment, which begins with gradual environmental warming in the late Pleistocene,
continues with the desiccation of the desert lakes, followed by a brief return to pluvial conditions,
and concludes with a general warming and drying trend, with periodic reversals that continue to the
present (Warren and Crabtree 1986).
ETHNOGRAPHY
The project area is near the intersection of the traditional cultural territories of the Cahuilla,
Gabrielino, and Serrano (Kroeber 1925; Heizer 1968). Tribal territories were somewhat fluid and
changed over time. The first written accounts of these Southern California tribes are attributed to
the mission fathers, and later documentation was by others as indicated below.
Cahuilla
The territory of the Cahuilla ranged from the San Bernardino Mountains south to Borrego Springs
and the Chocolate Mountains, from Orocopia Mountain to the east, to the San Jacinto Plain and
Palomar Mountain to the west (Bean 1978). Cahuilla territory lies within the geographic center of
Southern California and encompassed diverse environments ranging from inland river valleys and
foothills to mountains and desert (Bean and Shipek 1978).
Cahuilla villages, generally located near water sources within canyons or near alluvial fans,
comprised groups of related individuals, generally from a single lineage, and the territory around the
village was owned by the villagers (Bean 1978). Like other Native American groups in Southern
CULTURAL RESOURCES ASSESSMENT JANUARY 2023 FONTANA PUBLIC STORAGE REDEVELOPMENT PROJECT FONTANA, CALIFORNIA
\\lsaazfiles.file.core.windows.net\projects\PUB2202\Technical Studies\Cultural\Report\PUB2202 CRA.docx (01/06/23) 5
California, the Cahuilla were semi-nomadic peoples leaving their villages and utilizing temporary
campsites to exploit seasonably available plant and animal resources (James 1960).
Cahuilla subsistence was based primarily on acorns, honey mesquite, screw beans, piñon nuts, and
cactus fruit, supplemented by a variety of wild fruits and berries, tubers, roots, and greens (Kroeber
1925; Heizer and Elsasser 1980). Hunting deer, rabbit, antelope, bighorn sheep, reptiles, small
rodents, quail, doves, ducks, and reptiles by means of bows, throwing sticks, traps, and communal
drives is documented (James 1960).
The Cahuilla were documented by Barrows (1900), Hooper (1920), and Strong (1929) among others.
Gabrielino
The territory of the Gabrielino included portions of Los Angeles, Orange, and San Bernardino
Counties during ethnohistoric times, and also extended inland into northwestern Riverside County
(Kroeber 1925; Heizer 1968). It encompassed an extremely diverse environment that included
coastal beaches, lagoons and marshes, inland river valleys, foothills and mountains (Bean and Shipek
1978).
The Gabrielino caught and collected seasonally available food resources, and led a semi-sedentary
lifestyle, living in permanent communities along inland watercourses and coastal estuaries.
Individuals from these villages took advantage of the varied resources available. Seasonally, as foods
became available, native groups moved to temporary camps to collect plant foods such as acorns,
buckwheat, chía, berries, and fruits, and to conduct communal rabbit and deer hunts. They also
established seasonal camps along the coast and near bays and estuaries to gather shellfish and hunt
waterfowl (Hudson 1971).
The Gabrielino lived in small communities, which were the focus of family life. Patrilineally linked,
extended families occupied each village (Kroeber 1925; Bean and Smith 1978a). Both clans and
villages were apparently exogamous, marrying individuals from outside the clan or village (Heizer
1968). Gabrielino villages were politically independent and were administered by a chief, who
inherited his position from his father. Shamans guided religious and medical activities, while group
hunting or fishing was supervised by individual male specialists (Bean and Smith 1978a).
The nearest historically known Native American community was the Gabrielino community of
Horuuvunga (also known to the Serrano as Jurupet and described to Alfred Kroeber as Hurumpa)
located approximately 7 miles south of the project area somewhere in the Jurupa Valley (Kroeber
1925; Kirkman 1938; McCawley 1996).
The Gabrielino were described by Johnston (1962), Blackburn (1962–1963), Hudson (1971), and
others.
Serrano
The Serrano lived in the area generally north of Cahuilla territory (western Riverside County),
occupying much of present-day San Bernardino County and northeastern Los Angeles County, but
CULTURAL RESOURCES ASSESSMENT JANUARY 2023 FONTANA PUBLIC STORAGE REDEVELOPMENT PROJECT FONTANA, CALIFORNIA
\\lsaazfiles.file.core.windows.net\projects\PUB2202\Technical Studies\Cultural\Report\PUB2202 CRA.docx (01/06/23) 6
there is some overlap in the ancestral areas. The term Serrano is Spanish for “mountaineer” or
“highlander” and is derived from sierra, meaning “mountain range” and was given to people who
inhabited the areas of the San Bernardino Mountains that had no associated mission (Bean and
Smith 1978b). The Serrano culture group actually incorporates two divisions, a mountain division
(referred to as the Mountain Serrano) and a desert division, referred to as the Desert Serrano
(Sutton and Earle 2017).
The Serrano were hunter-gatherers who exploited whatever flora was available in the area they
happened to be, generally it was acorns, pinion nuts, honey, mesquite, yucca, and cactus fruits, in
addition to various seeds, bulbs, and roots. Plants were consumed both raw and cooked. Food
processing involved the use of manos, metates, mortars, and pestles. Antelope, deer, mountain
sheep, rabbits, and rodents were hunted and captured, and the most common hunting implements
were the bow and arrow, throwing stick, traps, snares, and deadfalls. Meat was prepared in earth
ovens, by boiling in watertight baskets, or by parching (Bean and Smith 1978b).
The Serrano had a patrilineal society composed of clans and families linked by both ancestry and
ceremony, and most lived in small communities near reliable sources of water (springs, perennial
seeps, streams, and small lakes) (Benedict 1924). The basic settlement unit of the Serrano was a
village with a number of small satellite resource-gathering camps.
The Serrano were described by Benedict (1924), Bright (1975), Strong (1929), and others.
HISTORY
In California, the historic era is generally divided into three periods: the Spanish Period (1769 to
1821), the Mexican Period (1821 to 1848), and the American Period (1848 to present). As there
were no resources within the project area, the historic context will focus on the County and the local
community.
San Bernardino County
San Bernardino County was created in 1853 from portions of Los Angeles and San Diego Counties
due to mineral wealth, and the City of San Bernardino was incorporated as the County Seat the
following year. Gold was discovered in Holcomb and Bear Valleys in the San Bernardino Mountains
in 1860, and placer mining began in Lytle Creek. Silver was mined at Ivanpah in 1870 and the silver
mines of the Calico district were developed in the 1880s. Borax was first discovered in 1862 in the
Searles Dry Lake area near Trona (Hoover et al. 1990). Agriculture ultimately replaced mining as the
County’s economic base, with thousands of acres under cultivation by the beginning of World War I
(McGroarty 1914).
Fontana
The area that would later become Fontana was part of a land grant to Don Antonio Maria Lugo from
the Spanish Governor of California (Pio Pico) in 1813. Lugo’s sons sold a portion of the land
(including part of what is now Fontana) to a group of Mormon settlers in 1851 (Richards 1966), and
the Semi-Tropical Land & Water Company subsequently acquired the Fontana portion of the Rancho
and laid out a townsite in 1887 (Gudde 1998). In the early 1900s, the Fontana Development
CULTURAL RESOURCES ASSESSMENT JANUARY 2023 FONTANA PUBLIC STORAGE REDEVELOPMENT PROJECT FONTANA, CALIFORNIA
\\lsaazfiles.file.core.windows.net\projects\PUB2202\Technical Studies\Cultural\Report\PUB2202 CRA.docx (01/06/23) 7
Company acquired the land and established a community called Rosena, changed to Fontana in
1913 (Gudde 1998). Fontana was selected as the site for the Kaiser Company’s steel mill in 1942
and was incorporated 10 years later with a population of 13,695 as southern California’s leading
producer of steel and related products (Goodwin 2003). The steel industry dominated the City’s
economy until the late 1970s, when Kaiser Steel began to reduce production and manpower, and
the mill was closed in 1983 (Goodwin 2003). The plate steel and rolling mill plant was subsequently
acquired by California Steel Company, which continues to produce steel products.
CULTURAL RESOURCES ASSESSMENT JANUARY 2023 FONTANA PUBLIC STORAGE REDEVELOPMENT PROJECT FONTANA, CALIFORNIA
\\lsaazfiles.file.core.windows.net\projects\PUB2202\Technical Studies\Cultural\Report\PUB2202 CRA.docx (01/06/23) 8
METHODS
RECORD SEARCH
On December 6, 2022, the cultural resources record search was completed for the project area by
the South Central Coastal Information Center (SCCIC) at California State University, Fullerton. It
included a review of all recorded historic and prehistoric archaeological sites within 1 mile of the
project, as well as a review of known cultural resource reports. Appendix A contains the records
search bibliography.
ADDITIONAL RESEARCH
In November 2022, Senior Cultural Resources Manager/Archaeologist Riordan Goodwin reviewed
the Built Environment Resource Directory (BERD) along with LSA project files, online historic period
maps, and aerial photographs.
SACRED LANDS FILE SEARCH
LSA contacted the Native American Heritage Commission (NAHC) on October 20, 2022, and
requested a Sacred Lands File (SLF) search for the Project area.
FIELD SURVEY
On November 30, 2022, LSA Archaeological Technician Anna Resek surveyed the
unpaved/developed portion of the project area (0.5 acre of APN 0194-351-16) by walking transects
spaced approximately 10 meters (33 feet) apart, with particular attention given to exposed areas
and rodent dirt apron for cultural residues.
CULTURAL RESOURCES ASSESSMENT JANUARY 2023 FONTANA PUBLIC STORAGE REDEVELOPMENT PROJECT FONTANA, CALIFORNIA
\\lsaazfiles.file.core.windows.net\projects\PUB2202\Technical Studies\Cultural\Report\PUB2202 CRA.docx (01/06/23) 9
RESULTS
RECORD SEARCH
Data from the SCCIC indicate there have been 14 cultural resource studies previously conducted
within 1 mile of the proposed project, none of which included any portion of the project area.
Although no cultural resources are documented within the project area, one historic period
archaeological site (36-010330) and six built environment resources are recorded within 1 mile
(Table A). The nearest (36-014467, a hospital property) is across the street from the project site.
Only one of the resources is listed in the BERD (36-020000). No prehistoric resources are
documented within 1 mile.
Table A: Cultural Resources Within 1 Mile
Primary # Trinomial # Site Description Status
Codes
36-010330 CA-SBR-10330/H Historic period railroad route (Southern Pacific) c. 1880s —
36-011567 CA-SBR-11567/H Historic period foundations and associated landscaping —
36-014467 CA-SBR-14467/H 9961 Sierra Avenue (c. 1954 hospital complex) 6Z
36-020000 17363 San Bernardino Avenue (c. 1926 residence) 6Y
36-023576 9693 Alder Avenue (c. 1948 commercial building) —
36-034524 16593 Slover Avenue (c. 1949 residence) —
36-034525 34525 Slover Avenue (c. 1947 residence) —
ADDITIONAL RESEARCH
Online research revealed that there were never any buildings or structures within the project area
during the historic period, and the eucalyptus trees were not part of a windrow (HistoricAerials.com
2021).
SACRED LANDS FILE SEARCH
On November 23, 2022, the NAHC responded with positive results for the SLF search and a list of
tribes and individuals designated for consultation. LSA forwarded the results to the City on the same
day (Appendix B).
FIELD SURVEY
Ms. Resek conducted the pedestrian survey of the unpaved area of the project where ground
visibility was fair at approximately 50 percent with some obstruction of the surface by vegetation.
The project area is not graded and appears sightly disturbed by weed-abatement activities. Modern
refuse was noted in throughout the project area. Vegetation observed included ruderal grass
eucalyptus, wild cucumber, and annual sunflower. No cultural resources were identified.
CULTURAL RESOURCES ASSESSMENT JANUARY 2023 FONTANA PUBLIC STORAGE REDEVELOPMENT PROJECT FONTANA, CALIFORNIA
\\lsaazfiles.file.core.windows.net\projects\PUB2202\Technical Studies\Cultural\Report\PUB2202 CRA.docx (01/06/23) 10
FINDINGS AND RECOMMENDATIONS
A cultural resources records search, additional research, and a field survey were conducted for the
project area. No cultural resources are documented within the project parcels, and none was
identified within the unpaved/developed portion by the survey. No prehistoric resources were
documented within 1 mile, and sensitivity for in situ undocumented subsurface resources is low.
Therefore, no further investigation or archaeological monitoring is recommended.
In the event previously undocumented archaeological resources are identified during earthmoving
activities, further work in the area should be halted until the nature and significance of the find can
be assessed by a qualified archaeologist.
In the event human remains are encountered, State Health and Safety Code Section 7050.5. states
that no further disturbance shall occur until the County Coroner has made a determination of origin
and disposition pursuant to State Public Resources Code Section 5097.98. The County Coroner must
be notified of the find immediately. If the remains are determined to be Native American, the
County Coroner will notify the NAHC, which will determine and notify an MLD. With the permission
of the landowner or his/her authorized representative, the MLD may inspect the site of the
discovery. The MLD shall complete the inspection and make recommendations or preferences for
treatment within 48 hours of being granted access to the site. The MLD recommendations may
include scientific removal and nondestructive analysis of human remains and items associated with
Native American burials, preservation of Native American human remains and associated items in
place, relinquishment of Native American human remains and associated items to the descendants
for treatment, or any other culturally appropriate treatment.
CULTURAL RESOURCES ASSESSMENT JANUARY 2023 FONTANA PUBLIC STORAGE REDEVELOPMENT PROJECT FONTANA, CALIFORNIA
\\lsaazfiles.file.core.windows.net\projects\PUB2202\Technical Studies\Cultural\Report\PUB2202 CRA.docx (01/06/23) 11
REFERENCES
Barrows, David Prescott
1900 The Ethno-botany of the Coahilla [sic] Indians of Southern California. University of Chicago
Press.
Bean, Lowell John
1978 Cahuilla. In California, edited by R.F. Heizer, pp. 575–587. Handbook of North American
Indians, vol. 8, W.C. Sturtevant, general editor, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C.
Bean, Lowell John, and Charles R. Smith
1978a Gabrielino. In California, edited by R.F. Heizer, pp. 538–549. Handbook of North American
Indians, vol. 8, W.C. Sturtevant, general editor, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C.
1978b Serrano. In California, edited by R.F. Heizer, pp. 570–574. Handbook of North American
Indians, vol. 8, W.C. Sturtevant, general editor, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C.
Bean, Lowell John, and Florence C. Shipek
1978 Luiseño. In California, edited by R.F. Heizer, pp. 550–563. Handbook of North American
Indians, vol. 8, W.C. Sturtevant, general editor, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C.
Beck, Warren A., and Ynez D. Haase
1974 Historical Atlas of California. University of Oklahoma Press, Oklahoma City.
Benedict, Ruth F.
1924 A Brief Sketch of Serrano Culture. American Anthropologist 26 (3).
Betts, William F.
2014 Tracking the Trackless Trolley: An Archaeological Examination of the Lone Pine Canyon
Trolley.
Blackburn, Thomas C.
1962–1963 Ethnohistoric Descriptions of Gabrielino Material Culture. Annual Reports of the
University of California Archaeological Survey 5: 1–50.
Bright, William
1975 Two Notes on Takic Classification: Paper read at the Third Annual Uto-Aztecan
Conference, Flagstaff, June 19–20, 1975. (Copy, Manuscript No. 76–66 in National
Anthropological Archives, Smithsonian Institution, Washington.)
California Geological Survey
2002 California Geomorphic Provinces. California Geologic Survey Note 36. California
Department of Conservation.
CULTURAL RESOURCES ASSESSMENT JANUARY 2023 FONTANA PUBLIC STORAGE REDEVELOPMENT PROJECT FONTANA, CALIFORNIA
\\lsaazfiles.file.core.windows.net\projects\PUB2202\Technical Studies\Cultural\Report\PUB2202 CRA.docx (01/06/23) 12
Goodwin, Riordan
2003 Cultural and Paleontological Resources Assessment, J.W. Mitchell Specific Plan, City of
Fontana, San Bernardino County, California. Unpublished report on file at the AIC.
Gudde, Erwin G.
1998 California Place Names: The Origin and Etymology of Current Geographical Names. Fourth
edition, revised and enlarged by William Bright. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of
California Press.
Harley, R. Bruce
1988 Rev. Juan Caballeria: Historian or Storyteller? Rethinking the 1810 Dumetz Expedition. San
Bernardino County Museum Quarterly 35(2), 42 p.
Harrington, John Peabody
1913 Ethnographic Notes of John Peabody Harrington, p. 12.
Heizer, Robert F.
1968 The Indians of Los Angeles County. Hugo Reid’s Letters of 1852. Southwest Museum
Papers 21. Los Angeles, California.
Heizer, Robert F., and Albert B. Elsasser
1980 The Natural World of the California Indians. University of California Press, Berkeley and
Los Angeles.
HistoricAerials.com
2021 Various aerial photographs including the project area from 1948-2005.
Hooper, Lucile
1920 The Cahuilla Indians. University of California Publication in American Archaeology and
Ethnology. Vol. 16 No. 6. Reprinted by Malki Museum Press. Banning, California.
Hoover, Mildred Brooke, Hero Eugene Rensch, Ethel Grace Rensch, William N. Abeloe, and revised
by Douglas E. Kyle
1990 Historic Spots in California, Stanford University Press, Stanford, California.
Hudson, D. Travis
1971 Proto-Gabrielino Patterns of Territorial Organization in Southern Coastal California. Pacific
Coast Archaeological Society Quarterly 7(2):49–76.
James, Harry C.
1960 The Cahuilla Indians. Los Angeles: Westernlore Press. Reprinted in 1969 and 1985 by
Malki Museum Press. Banning, California.
Johnston, Bernice E.
1962 California’s Gabrielino Indians. Frederick Webb Hodge Anniversary Publication Fund 8, Los
Angeles: Southwest Museum.
CULTURAL RESOURCES ASSESSMENT JANUARY 2023 FONTANA PUBLIC STORAGE REDEVELOPMENT PROJECT FONTANA, CALIFORNIA
\\lsaazfiles.file.core.windows.net\projects\PUB2202\Technical Studies\Cultural\Report\PUB2202 CRA.docx (01/06/23) 13
Kirkman, George W.
1938 The Kirkman-Harriman Pictorial and Historical Map of Los Angeles County: 1860 A.D.
Kroeber, A.L.
1925 Handbook of the Indians of California. Bulletin No. 78, Bureau of American Ethnology,
Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C.
McCawley, William
1996 The First Angelinos: The Gabrielino Indians of Los Angeles. Banning and Novato: Malki
Museum Press and Ballena Press.
McGroarty, John Steve
1914 Southern California. Southern California Panama Exposition Commission.
Moratto, Michael J.
2004 California Archaeology. Orlando, Florida: Academic Press. Originally published 1984.
Norris, R.M., and R.W. Webb
1976 Geology of California, John Wiley and Sons, Inc., Santa Barbara.
Richards, Elizabeth W.
1966 Guideposts to History: Concerning Origins of Place and Street Names in San Bernardino
County. Santa Fe Federal Savings.
Schoenherr, Allan A.
1992 A Natural History of California. University of California Press, Berkeley and Los Angeles.
Sharp, R.P.
1976 Geology: Field Guide to Southern California. Kendall/Hunt Publishing Company, Second
Edition: 181.
Strong, William D.
1929 Aboriginal Society in Southern California. University of California Publications in American
Archaeology and Ethnology 26(1): 1–358. Berkeley.
Swope, Karen, and Meg McDonald
1985 Environmental Impact Evaluation: Archaeological Assessment of Tentative Tract 13000,
City of Fontana, San Bernardino County, California. ARU UCR.
Tang, Bai "Tom," Deirdre Encarnacion, Terri Jacquemain, and Daniel Ballester
2013 Historical/Archaeological Resources Survey Report: Vulcan Conservation and Flood
Control Project, in and near the City of Fontana, San Bernardino County, California. CRM
Tech.
USGS (United States Geological Survey)
1980 Fontana, California 7.5-minute topographic quadrangle map.
CULTURAL RESOURCES ASSESSMENT JANUARY 2023 FONTANA PUBLIC STORAGE REDEVELOPMENT PROJECT FONTANA, CALIFORNIA
\\lsaazfiles.file.core.windows.net\projects\PUB2202\Technical Studies\Cultural\Report\PUB2202 CRA.docx (01/06/23) 14
Wallace, William J.
1955 A Suggested Chronology for Southern California Coastal Archaeology. Southwestern
Journal of Anthropology 11(3):214–230.
1978 Post-Pleistocene Archaeology. In California, edited by R. Heizer, pp. 550–563. Handbook of
North American Indians, Vol. 8. W.C. Sturtevant, general editor. Smithsonian Institution,
Washington, D.C.
Warren, Claude N.
1968 Cultural Tradition and Ecological Adaptation on the Southern California Coast. Eastern
New Mexico University Contributions in Anthropology 1(3). Portales.
1984 The Desert Region. In California Archaeology, by M. Moratto with contributions by D.A.
Fredrickson, C. Raven, and C. N. Warren, pp. 339–430. Academic Press, Orlando, Florida.
Warren, Claude N., and Robert H. Crabtree
1986 Prehistory of the Southwestern Area. In W.L. D’Azevedo ed., Handbook of the North
American Indians, Vol. 11, Great Basin, pp. 183–193. Washington D.C.: Smithsonian
Institution.
CULTURAL RESOURCES ASSESSMENT JANUARY 2023 FONTANA PUBLIC STORAGE REDEVELOPMENT PROJECT FONTANA, CALIFORNIA
\\lsaazfiles.file.core.windows.net\projects\PUB2202\Technical Studies\Cultural\Report\PUB2202 CRA.docx (01/06/23)
APPENDIX A
RECORD SEARCH BIBLIOGRAPHY
Report List
Report No.Year Title AffiliationAuthor(s)ResourcesOther IDs
SB-01443 1984 ARCHAEOLOGICAL RESOURCES
ASSESSMENT CONDUCTED FOR THE
SOUTHERN PACIFIC BUSINESS PARK,
CITY OF FONTANA, SAN BERNARDINO
COUNTY, CALIFORNIA
ARCHAEOLOGICAL
RESOURCE
MANAGEMENT CORP.
DEL CHARIO,
KATHLEEN C. and
MARIE G. COTTRELL
36-005443, 36-005444NADB-R - 1061443;
Voided - 84-7.1
SB-02391 1991 A PHASE I CULTURAL RESOURCES
STUDY OF THE 4.6-ACRE KAISER
PARKING FACILITY IN FONTANA, SAN
BERNARDINO COUNTY
ARCHAEOLOGICAL
ASSOCIATES
VAN HORN, DAVID M.NADB-R - 1062391;
Voided - 91-3.2
SB-03599 1998 CULTURAL RESOURCE RECORD SEARCH
AND SURVEY REPORT FOR A PBMS
TELECOMMUNICATIONS FACILITY: CM
016-12 IN THE CITY OF FONTANA, CA. 5PP
LSABRECHBIEL, BRANTNADB-R - 1063599
SB-03603 1998 INSTALLATION OF WATER PIPES ALONG I-
10 BETWEEN COLTON AND FONTANA.
10PP
CRM TECHLOVE, BRUCENADB-R - 1063603
SB-03767 2002 A PHASE I CULTURAL RSOURCES
INVENTORY OF THE FONTANA UNIFIED
SCHOOL DISTRICT JURUPA HILLS
MIDDLE SCHOOL SITE IN THE CITY OF
FONTANA, SAN BERNARDINO COUNTY,
CA. 33PP
MCKENNA ET ALMCKENNA, JEANETTE
A.
NADB-R - 1063767
SB-04372 2004 CA-5696-A/KAISER HOSPITAL. 12PP EARTH TOUCHTHAL, ERIKANADB-R - 1064372
SB-04873 2005 Historical/Archaeological Resources Survey
Report: San Bernardino Avenue Pipeline and
Pump Station In and Near the City of
Fontana, San Bernardino County, California.
CRM TechEncarnacion, DeirdreNADB-R - 1064873
SB-05972 2008 A Cultura Resources Investigation for the
Proposed Slover Avenue Improvements from
West of Laurel Avenue to Maple Avenue in
the Community of Bloomington, San
Bernardino County, California.
McKenna et alMcKenna, Jeanette A.NADB-R - 1065972
SB-06516 1999 Cultural Resource Inventory Report for
Williams Communications, Inc., Proposed
Fiber Optic System Installation Project, Los
Angeles to Riverside, Los Angeles, Riverside
and San Bernardino Counties.
Ashkar, ShahiraNADB-R - 1066516
Page 1 of 2 SBAIC 12/5/2022 2:44:09 PM
Report List
Report No.Year Title AffiliationAuthor(s)ResourcesOther IDs
SB-06532 2009 A Supplemental and Comprehensive Cultural
Resources Investigation for the Proposed
Slover Avenue Improvements Project
Between Tamarind Avenue and Cedar
Avenue in Bloomington, San Bernardino
County, California.
McKenna et alMcKenna, Jeanette A.NADB-R - 1066532
SB-06787 2008 Historical/Archaeological Resources Survey
Report: Chino Groundwater Basin Dry-Year
Yield Program Expansion, Los Angeles,
Riverside and San Bernardino Counties,
California.
CRM TechTang, Bai “Tom”, Deirdre
Encarnacion, and Daniel
Ballester
NADB-R - 1066787
SB-06965 2011 Direct APE Historic Architectural Assessment
for Metro PCB California, LLC,
LA5617A/Sherri’s Thriftstore (TWCO
CA2291) 9693 Alder Avenue, Fontana,
California 92555.
Johnson, Brent 36-023576NADB-R - 1066965
SB-07055 2002 Sierra and Slover Cultural Resources Survey ASM AffiliatesGhabhlain, Sinead 36-011567
SB-07123 2010 Supplemental Archaeological Survey Report,
66kV Transmission Lines Access Roads,
Tehachapi Renewable Transmission Project
Segements & and 8, Los Angeles and San
Bernardino Counties, California.
Panich, Lee and John
Holson
NADB-R - 1067123
Page 2 of 2 SBAIC 12/5/2022 2:44:10 PM
CULTURAL RESOURCES ASSESSMENT JANUARY 2023 FONTANA PUBLIC STORAGE REDEVELOPMENT PROJECT FONTANA, CALIFORNIA
\\lsaazfiles.file.core.windows.net\projects\PUB2202\Technical Studies\Cultural\Report\PUB2202 CRA.docx (01/06/23)
APPENDIX B
SACRED LANDS FILE SEARCH RESULTS
STATE OF CALIFORNIA Gavin Newsom, Governor
NATIVE AMERICAN HERITAGE COMMISSION
Page 1 of 1
November 22, 2022
Rory Goodwin
LSA
Via Email to: Rory.Goodwin@lsa.net
Re: Public Storage Redevelopment Project (PUB2202), San Bernardino County
Dear Mr. Goodwin:
A record search of the Native American Heritage Commission (NAHC) Sacred Lands File (SLF)
was completed for the information submitted for the above referenced project. The results
were positive. Please contact the Gabrieleno Band of Mission Indians - Kizh Nation on the
attached list for information. Please note that tribes do not always record their sacred sites in
the SLF, nor are they required to do so. A SLF search is not a substitute for consultation with tribes
that are traditionally and culturally affiliated with a project’s geographic area. Other sources of
cultural resources should also be contacted for information regarding known and recorded
sites, such as the appropriate regional California Historical Research Information System (CHRIS)
archaeological Information Center for the presence of recorded archaeological sites.
Attached is a list of Native American tribes who may also have knowledge of cultural resources
in the project area. This list should provide a starting place in locating areas of potential
adverse impact within the proposed project area. Please contact all of those listed; if they
cannot supply information, they may recommend others with specific knowledge. By
contacting all those listed, your organization will be better able to respond to claims of failure to
consult with the appropriate tribe. If a response has not been received within two weeks of
notification, the Commission requests that you follow-up with a telephone call or email to
ensure that the project information has been received.
If you receive notification of change of addresses and phone numbers from tribes, please notify
the NAHC. With your assistance, we can assure that our lists contain current information.
If you have any questions or need additional information, please contact me at my email
address: Cameron.vela@nahc.ca.gov.
Sincerely,
Cameron Vela
Cultural Resources Analyst
Attachment
CHAIRPERSON
Laura Miranda Luiseño
VICE CHAIRPERSON
Reginald Pagaling Chumash
SECRETARY
Sara Dutschke
Miwok
COMMISSIONER Isaac Bojorquez
Ohlone-Costanoan
COMMISSIONER
Buffy McQuillen Yokayo Pomo, Yuki,
Nomlaki
COMMISSIONER Wayne Nelson Luiseño
COMMISSIONER
Stanley Rodriguez
Kumeyaay
COMMISSIONER
[Vacant]
COMMISSIONER
[Vacant]
EXECUTIVE SECRETARY Raymond C. Hitchcock
Miwok/Nisenan
NAHC HEADQUARTERS
1550 Harbor Boulevard Suite 100
West Sacramento,
California 95691
(916) 373-3710
nahc@nahc.ca.gov NAHC.ca.gov
Agua Caliente Band of Cahuilla
Indians
Reid Milanovich, Chairperson
5401 Dinah Shore Drive
Palm Springs, CA, 92264
Phone: (760) 699 - 6800
Fax: (760) 699-6919
laviles@aguacaliente.net
Cahuilla
Agua Caliente Band of Cahuilla
Indians
Patricia Garcia-Plotkin, Director
5401 Dinah Shore Drive
Palm Springs, CA, 92264
Phone: (760) 699 - 6907
Fax: (760) 699-6924
ACBCI-THPO@aguacaliente.net
Cahuilla
Augustine Band of Cahuilla
Mission Indians
Amanda Vance, Chairperson
84-001 Avenue 54
Coachella, CA, 92236
Phone: (760) 398 - 4722
Fax: (760) 369-7161
hhaines@augustinetribe.com
Cahuilla
Cabazon Band of Mission
Indians
Doug Welmas, Chairperson
84-245 Indio Springs Parkway
Indio, CA, 92203
Phone: (760) 342 - 2593
Fax: (760) 347-7880
jstapp@cabazonindians-nsn.gov
Cahuilla
Cahuilla Band of Indians
Daniel Salgado, Chairperson
52701 U.S. Highway 371
Anza, CA, 92539
Phone: (951) 763 - 5549
Fax: (951) 763-2808
Chairman@cahuilla.net
Cahuilla
Gabrieleno Band of Mission
Indians - Kizh Nation
Andrew Salas, Chairperson
P.O. Box 393
Covina, CA, 91723
Phone: (626) 926 - 4131
admin@gabrielenoindians.org
Gabrieleno
Gabrieleno/Tongva San Gabriel
Band of Mission Indians
Anthony Morales, Chairperson
P.O. Box 693
San Gabriel, CA, 91778
Phone: (626) 483 - 3564
Fax: (626) 286-1262
GTTribalcouncil@aol.com
Gabrieleno
Gabrielino /Tongva Nation
Sandonne Goad, Chairperson
106 1/2 Judge John Aiso St.,
#231
Los Angeles, CA, 90012
Phone: (951) 807 - 0479
sgoad@gabrielino-tongva.com
Gabrielino
Gabrielino Tongva Indians of
California Tribal Council
Christina Conley, Tribal
Consultant and Administrator
P.O. Box 941078
Simi Valley, CA, 93094
Phone: (626) 407 - 8761
christina.marsden@alumni.usc.ed
u
Gabrielino
Gabrielino Tongva Indians of
California Tribal Council
Robert Dorame, Chairperson
P.O. Box 490
Bellflower, CA, 90707
Phone: (562) 761 - 6417
Fax: (562) 761-6417
gtongva@gmail.com
Gabrielino
Gabrielino-Tongva Tribe
Charles Alvarez,
23454 Vanowen Street
West Hills, CA, 91307
Phone: (310) 403 - 6048
roadkingcharles@aol.com
Gabrielino
Los Coyotes Band of Cahuilla
and Cupeño Indians
Ray Chapparosa, Chairperson
P.O. Box 189
Warner Springs, CA, 92086-0189
Phone: (760) 782 - 0711
Fax: (760) 782-0712
Cahuilla
1 of 3
This list is current only as of the date of this document. Distribution of this list does not relieve any person of statutory responsibility as defined in Section 7050.5 of
the Health and Safety Code, Section 5097.94 of the Public Resource Section 5097.98 of the Public Resources Code.
This list is only applicable for contacting local Native Americans with regard to cultural resources assessment for the proposed Public Storage Redevelopment
Project (PUB2202), San Bernardino County.
PROJ-2022-
006866
11/22/2022 09:07 AM
Native American Heritage Commission
Native American Contact List
San Bernardino County
11/22/2022
Morongo Band of Mission
Indians
Ann Brierty, THPO
12700 Pumarra Road
Banning, CA, 92220
Phone: (951) 755 - 5259
Fax: (951) 572-6004
abrierty@morongo-nsn.gov
Cahuilla
Serrano
Morongo Band of Mission
Indians
Robert Martin, Chairperson
12700 Pumarra Road
Banning, CA, 92220
Phone: (951) 755 - 5110
Fax: (951) 755-5177
abrierty@morongo-nsn.gov
Cahuilla
Serrano
Pala Band of Mission Indians
Shasta Gaughen, Tribal Historic
Preservation Officer
PMB 50, 35008 Pala Temecula
Rd.
Pala, CA, 92059
Phone: (760) 891 - 3515
Fax: (760) 742-3189
sgaughen@palatribe.com
Cupeno
Luiseno
Pechanga Band of Indians
Mark Macarro, Chairperson
P.O. Box 1477
Temecula, CA, 92593
Phone: (951) 770 - 6000
Fax: (951) 695-1778
epreston@pechanga-nsn.gov
Luiseno
Pechanga Band of Indians
Paul Macarro, Cultural Resources
Coordinator
P.O. Box 1477
Temecula, CA, 92593
Phone: (951) 770 - 6306
Fax: (951) 506-9491
pmacarro@pechanga-nsn.gov
Luiseno
Quechan Tribe of the Fort Yuma
Reservation
Jill McCormick, Historic
Preservation Officer
P.O. Box 1899
Yuma, AZ, 85366
Phone: (760) 572 - 2423
historicpreservation@quechantrib
e.com
Quechan
Quechan Tribe of the Fort Yuma
Reservation
Manfred Scott, Acting Chairman
Kw'ts'an Cultural Committee
P.O. Box 1899
Yuma, AZ, 85366
Phone: (928) 750 - 2516
scottmanfred@yahoo.com
Quechan
Ramona Band of Cahuilla
Joseph Hamilton, Chairperson
P.O. Box 391670
Anza, CA, 92539
Phone: (951) 763 - 4105
Fax: (951) 763-4325
admin@ramona-nsn.gov
Cahuilla
Ramona Band of Cahuilla
John Gomez, Environmental
Coordinator
P. O. Box 391670
Anza, CA, 92539
Phone: (951) 763 - 4105
Fax: (951) 763-4325
jgomez@ramona-nsn.gov
Cahuilla
Rincon Band of Luiseno Indians
Bo Mazzetti, Chairperson
One Government Center Lane
Valley Center, CA, 92082
Phone: (760) 749 - 1051
Fax: (760) 749-5144
bomazzetti@aol.com
Luiseno
Rincon Band of Luiseno Indians
Cheryl Madrigal, Tribal Historic
Preservation Officer
One Government Center Lane
Valley Center, CA, 92082
Phone: (760) 297 - 2635
crd@rincon-nsn.gov
Luiseno
2 of 3
This list is current only as of the date of this document. Distribution of this list does not relieve any person of statutory responsibility as defined in Section 7050.5 of
the Health and Safety Code, Section 5097.94 of the Public Resource Section 5097.98 of the Public Resources Code.
This list is only applicable for contacting local Native Americans with regard to cultural resources assessment for the proposed Public Storage Redevelopment
Project (PUB2202), San Bernardino County.
PROJ-2022-
006866
11/22/2022 09:07 AM
Native American Heritage Commission
Native American Contact List
San Bernardino County
11/22/2022
San Manuel Band of Mission
Indians
Jessica Mauck, Director of
Cultural Resources
26569 Community Center Drive
Highland, CA, 92346
Phone: (909) 864 - 8933
Jessica.Mauck@sanmanuel-
nsn.gov
Serrano
Santa Rosa Band of Cahuilla
Indians
Lovina Redner, Tribal Chair
P.O. Box 391820
Anza, CA, 92539
Phone: (951) 659 - 2700
Fax: (951) 659-2228
lsaul@santarosa-nsn.gov
Cahuilla
Serrano Nation of Mission
Indians
Mark Cochrane, Co-Chairperson
P. O. Box 343
Patton, CA, 92369
Phone: (909) 528 - 9032
serranonation1@gmail.com
Serrano
Serrano Nation of Mission
Indians
Wayne Walker, Co-Chairperson
P. O. Box 343
Patton, CA, 92369
Phone: (253) 370 - 0167
serranonation1@gmail.com
Serrano
Soboba Band of Luiseno
Indians
Joseph Ontiveros, Cultural
Resource Department
P.O. BOX 487
San Jacinto, CA, 92581
Phone: (951) 663 - 5279
Fax: (951) 654-4198
jontiveros@soboba-nsn.gov
Cahuilla
Luiseno
Soboba Band of Luiseno
Indians
Isaiah Vivanco, Chairperson
P. O. Box 487
San Jacinto, CA, 92581
Phone: (951) 654 - 5544
Fax: (951) 654-4198
ivivanco@soboba-nsn.gov
Cahuilla
Luiseno
Torres-Martinez Desert Cahuilla
Indians
Cultural Committee,
P.O. Box 1160
Thermal, CA, 92274
Phone: (760) 397 - 0300
Fax: (760) 397-8146
Cultural-
Committee@torresmartinez-
nsn.gov
Cahuilla
3 of 3
This list is current only as of the date of this document. Distribution of this list does not relieve any person of statutory responsibility as defined in Section 7050.5 of
the Health and Safety Code, Section 5097.94 of the Public Resource Section 5097.98 of the Public Resources Code.
This list is only applicable for contacting local Native Americans with regard to cultural resources assessment for the proposed Public Storage Redevelopment
Project (PUB2202), San Bernardino County.
PROJ-2022-
006866
11/22/2022 09:07 AM
Native American Heritage Commission
Native American Contact List
San Bernardino County
11/22/2022