The Coast Miwok spoke their own
Coast Miwok language in the
Utian linguistic group. They lived by
hunting and gathering, and lived in small bands without centralized political authority. In the springtime they would head to the coasts to hunt
salmon and other seafood, including seaweed. Otherwise their staple foods were primarily
acorns—particularly from
black and
tan oak–nuts and wild game, such as deer and
cottontail rabbits and
black-tailed deer,
Odocoileus hemionus columbianus, a coastal subspecies of the
California mule deer,
Odocoileus hemionus. When hunting deer, Miwok hunters traditionally used
Brewer's angelica,
Angelica breweri to eliminate their own scent. Miwok did not typically hunt bears.
Yerba buena tea leaves were used medicinally. Tattooing was a traditional practice among Coast Miwok, and they burned
poison oak for a pigment. Their traditional houses, called "kotcha", were constructed with slabs of tule grass or redwood bark in a cone-shaped form. Miwok people are skilled at
basketry. A recreated Coast Miwok village called
Kule Loklo is located at the
Point Reyes National Seashore.
Cultural subdivisions In
C. Hart Merriam's discussions with Coast Miwok peoples, he identified three cultural tribes: • Olamentko, pronounced O-la-MENT-ko (around Bodega Bay) and now called Olamentke • Lekahtewutko, pronounced Lek-KAH-te-WUT-ko (in south-central Sonoma County) and now called Lekatuit • Hookooeko, pronounced HOO-koo-EE-ko (in Marin County and southern Sonoma County), and now called Huukuiko, whom the Olamentko called Olumko, or "South People." These tribes did not have a political structure and so are not "tribes" in that sense. Rather, chiefs or headmen (
oi-bu in Olamentko and
hoipu in Hookooeko) were empowered at the tribelet level. The Coast Miwok did not have a single name for all three tribes, describing themselves instead by tribe, tribelet, or village, depending on the context. Using Merriam's divisions, the tribelets as shown on the map to the right – itself derived from Milliken
Food Sustenance Comparable to the modern concepts of farming and restoration, Coast Miwok practiced their own methods. Coast Miwok were active stewards to encourage and sustain
ecological life-giving sources, otherwise known as
resources. For example cultivation efforts involved seed collection, storing seeds, propagation, and transplantation. Other methods include prescribed burns and generational management of oak tree groves or
stands. • Acorns and Nuts: •
Fagaceae or Beech family used acorns: Golden Chinquapin
Chrysolepis chrysophylla, Black Oak Q. kelloggii, Coast Live Oak
Q. agrifolia, Valley Oak
Q. lobata.
Tan Oak Lithocarpus densiflorus Hazel Nut Corylus cornuta. California Bay Umbellularia californica. • Seeds: • Primrose family
Onagraceae:
Clarkia spp. Sunflower family
Asteraceae:
Tidy Tips Layia spp., Mule’s ear
Wyethia spp.,Tarweeds
Madia spp. Hezmizonia spp.,Checkerbloom Sidalcea malviflora • Berries: Thimbleberry
Rubus parviflorus, Currants and Gooseberry
Ribes spp., Blackberry
Rubus ursinus, Wild Strawberry
Fragaria vesca., Huckleberry
Vaccinium ovatum, Bilberry
Vaccinium cespitosum,
Salmon Berry Rubus spectabilis • Bulbs and shoots: Tule shoots
Schoenoplectus sp., Allium spp. Wild onion, Lily
Fritillaria spp. Mariposa lily Calochortus spp. Ithuriel's spear
Triteleia laxa, • Greens
: Clover
, Miner’s lettuce
Claytonia spp. Technology Building shelter, assisting travel and tools were specialized by the flora available. Coast Miwok utilized various species for their intrinsic properties, fire and rot resistance, fiber strength, flexibility and color ect. • Shelter: Sequoia sempervirens, Redwood tree bark used as building materials for constructing shelter. Ferns for cross-thatching. • Travel: Sedges
Schoenoplectus acutus and
S. californicus were used to make
Tule Reed canoes • Tools: • Bow making for hunting or strong wood needs:
Incense cedar Calocedrus decurrens, Pacific Yew Taxus brevifolia • Plant fibers: Milkweed
Asclepias spp., California Hemp
Hoita macrostachya, Ground Iris
Iris macrosiphon, Dogbane
Apocynum spp., Ninebark
Physocarpus capitatus • Cudweed or Ladies’ Tobacco
Pseudognaphalium californicum, Rabbit tobacco spp. (stimulant) • Holy Herb California Yerba Santa
Eriodictyon californicum (smudging) • California Mugwort
Artemisia douglasiana (headache relief and mourning)
Religion Coast Miwok people's world view included
animism, and one form this took was the
Kuksu religion that was evident in Central and Northern California. This included elaborate acting and dancing ceremonies in traditional costume, an annual mourning ceremony, puberty
rites of passage,
shamanic intervention with the spirit world and an all-male society that met in subterranean dance rooms. Kuksu was shared with other indigenous ethnic groups of Central California, such as their neighbors the
Pomo, also
Maidu,
Ohlone,
Esselen, and northernmost
Yokuts. However Kroeber observed less "specialized
cosmogony" in the Miwok, which he termed one of the "southern Kuksu-dancing groups", in comparison to the
Maidu and other northern California tribes. Coast Miwok
mythology and narratives were similar to those of other natives of Central and Northern California. The Coast Miwok believed in animal and human spirits, and saw the animal spirits as their ancestors.
Coyote was seen as their ancestor and
creator god. In their stories, the Earth began with land formed out of the
Pacific Ocean.
Traditional narratives In their
myths, legends, tales, and histories, the Coast Miwok participated in the general cultural pattern of Central California. ==Villages==