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Native Americans

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The San Francisco Bay Area was settled by Native Americans before the end of the last Ice Age flooded the river valley (rúmmey waayi) that became San Francisco Bay (about 5,000 years ago).

The ancestors (muwékmakuš) of the Muwekma Ohlone Tribe lived in villages along freshwater creeks (rúmmeytak) on the Peninsula and in the East Bay for more than 10,000 years. The closest community to the Stanford Redwood City site at the time of Spanish colonization was known as Lamchin.

Stanford Redwood City was at the margins of the marsh, and would have been a good place for hunting (punyi) tule elk and waterfowl and collecting tule reeds (róokoš) and other marsh plants (siská). The tule reed has a porous fiber center, and was used by the Muwekma Ohlone for a variety of purposes. Because the tule reed floats, it was used to make boats (wálin) for travel on the Bay. And because of its insulating quality the tule reed was also used to thatch houses (rúwwáakma).

Muwekma Ohlone people live in modern houses today (ne túuxi), but continue to teach their children (šinniinikma) traditional cultural knowledge about their ancestral homeland (warep). The Muwekma Ohlone Tribe is a good friend (horše ‘aččo) to Stanford University (Stanford University-tak) and supports our educational mission through collaborations with Jasper Ridge (‘Ootchamin ‘Ooyakma), the Educational Farm, the Archaeology Center and the Native American Cultural Center.