[26] This is shown even more clearly on the Hezeta map of 1775 reproduced by Herbert E. Bolton, Historical Memoirs of New California by Fray Francisco Palóu, 4 vols. (Berkeley, 1926), Vol. IV, facing p. 16. George C. Davidson in his Identification (pp. 17-18, 34, 39) made a similar identification of the Indian village site at the Limantour Estero in Drake's Bay.
[27] Bolton, op. cit., n. 19. See also L. L. Loud, Ethnogeography and Archaeology of the Wiyot Territory, Univ. Calif. Publ. Am. Arch. and Ethn., Vol. 14, No. 3 (Berkeley, 1918), p. 243.
[28] H. R. Wagner, Spanish Voyages to the Northwest Coast of America, California Historical Society, Special Publication No. 4 (San Francisco, 1929), p. 158.
[29] For details see Kroeber, Handbook, pp. 78-79, pl. 9; and Loud, Ethnogeography, pp. 243, 244.
[30] Wagner, Drake's Voyage, pp. 157, 158.
[31] "Fray Benito de la Sierra's Account of the Hezeta Expedition to the Northwest Coast in 1775," trans. by A. J. Baker, introd. and notes by H. R. Wagner, California Historical Society Quarterly, IX (1930), 218.
[32] See T. A. Rickard, "The Use of Iron and Copper by the Indians of British Columbia," British Columbia Historical Quarterly, III (1939), 26-27, where the Hezeta finds are expressly discussed. Rickard's opinion also differs from Wagner's.
[33] Francisco Eliza in 1793 said: "The Puerto de Trinidad is quite small; no vessel can be moored so as to turn with the wind or tide. The bottom for the most part is rock. The land consists of quite high and extended hills full of pines and oaks" (H. R. Wagner, "The Last Spanish Exploration of the Northwest Coast and the Attempt to Colonize Bodega Bay," California Historical Society Quarterly, X [1931], 335). For photographic views of Trinidad Bay see Thomas T. Waterman, Yurok Geography, Univ. Calif. Publ. Am. Arch. and Ethn., Vol. XVI, No. 5 (Berkeley, 1920), pls. 1, 16.
[34] Kroeber, Handbook, p. 278, inferentially concurs with this conclusion.
[35] Reprinted in Drake's Plate of Brass, pp. 32-46.