Todd J. Braje, associate professor of anthropology at San Diego State University, has spent nearly 15 years exploring the archaeology, ecology, and history of the Northern Channel Islands. He has been editor of the Journal of California and Great Basin Anthropology, currently serves as coeditor of the Journal of Island and Coastal Archaeology, and is author of Modern Oceans, Ancient Sites (2010) and Shellfish for the Celestial Kingdom (2016). Jon Erlandson is director of the Museum of Natural and Cultural History and professor of anthropology at the University of Oregon. He has published 20 books and hundreds of scholarly articles, many drawing on his nearly 40 years of work on the Channel Islands. In 2013, Erlandson was elected a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Torben Rick is curator of human environmental interactions and chair of the department of anthropology at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of Natural History. He has active field projects on California’s Channel Islands and the Chesapeake Bay, which are collaborative with researchers from a variety of disciplines and focus on ancient and modern human environmental interactions.
Islands, both isolated landforms and those closely connected to an adjacent mainland (as the California Channel Islands are), offer excellent laboratories for studying natural and cultural events that shape the land through time. Considered collectively, Braje, Erlandson, and Rick combine over 70 years of experience researching the northern Channel Islands. This collaborative work distills the essence of their findings, along with those of other researchers, for a general readership…. A notes section follows the text, and a glossary and recommended readings conclude the volume. For scholars interested in the cultural geography and paleogeology of coastal California, including the history of the Chumash people who inhabited the Channel Islands for thousands of years; local people; tourists; and employees of various governmental agencies now managing the islands, this book excellently situates the archipelago within its complicated past. Recommended. General readers. * Choice Reviews * This important book brings together three respected authorities on California’s Channel Islands. Their collective expertise brings us a timely, and much needed, progress report on a generation of innovative, multidisciplinary research aimed firmly not at specialists, but at a wider audience. This attractively written account will become an essential tool as we all confront the issue of stewardship of the islands for future generations. -- Brian Fagan, distinguished emeritus professor of anthropology, University of California, Santa Barbara Islands Through Time is an incredible book penned by three notable scholars who weave together an amazing story about human and environmental interactions on the Northern Channel Islands over millennia. This book is a gamechanger in demonstrating how lessons from the past provide crucial baselines for implementing conservation and management goals to make island ecosystems more sustainable and resilient. The book shows why Indigenous people and other relevant stakeholders need to be on the frontlines in protecting and stewarding our island ecosystems in the face of climate change and many other challenges today. -- Kent G. Lightfoot, professor of anthropology, University of California, Berkeley