Santa Rosa Island is the second largest of the Channel Islands of California at 53,195 acres (215.27 km² or 83.118 sq mi). Defined by the United States Census Bureau as Block 3009, Block Group 3, Census Tract 29.10 of Santa Barbara County, California, the 2000 census showed an official population of 2 persons. Block 3009, Block Group 3, Census Tract 29.10, Santa Barbara County United States Census Bureau It is part of Channel Islands National Park.
Santa Rosa is located about 26 miles (42 km) off the coast of Santa Barbara, California in Santa Barbara County.
It is occupied by rolling hills, deep canyons, a coastal lagoon and beaches adorned with sand dunes and driftwood. The Chumash, an American Indian people who lived in the Channel Islands at the time of European contact, called the driftwood wima because channel currents brought ashore logs from which they built tomols (plank canoes).
Archeologists have discovered the remains of 13,000 year-old Arlington Springs Woman, among the oldest human remains in the Americas, on Santa Rosa Island. Pygmy mammoths (Mammuthus exilis) have also been excavated there.
Its previous owner, Vail & Vickers of Santa Barbara, had owned the island since 1902 and sold it to the U.S. federal government for $30 million in 1986. The last domestic cattle were shipped off the island in 1998. The National Park Service will permit the former landowners to retain non-native Kaibab Mule Deer and Roosevelt Elk on the island until 2011.
Flightless geese, giant mice and pygmy mammoths are extinct, while the island fox, spotted skunk, and munchkin duleya (one of the six endemic plant species on the island) still live there.
Its surrounding waters serve as an invaluable nursery for the sea life that feeds larger marine mammals and seabirds.
Channel Islands of California | Archaeological sites in the United States
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