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Chumash Made Money 2,000 Years Ago

UCSB archaeologist Lynn Gamble believes shell bead money existed 1,000 years earlier than previously thought.

Chumash Made Money 2,000 Years Ago

It’s long been known that the indigenous Chumash people of the Santa Barbara Channel produced and used shell bead money throughout the region and beyond, with archaeological discoveries as far away as Arizona and the Pacific Northwest. But the prevailing wisdom was that the currency only dated back about 800 years.

That estimate is being challenged by longtime UCSB archaeologist Lynn Gamble , the professor emerita whose latest paper in the Journal of Anthropological Archaeology argues that the money was being made in this region as early as 2,000 years ago.

“[T]his changes our thinking of hunter-gatherers and sociopolitical and economic complexity,” said Gamble in a press release about the theory, which also challenges traditional notions of “complex” versus “primitive” societies. “This may be the first example of the use of money anywhere in the Americas at this time.”