Notably, the site also includes shards of Chinese and Japanese ceramicware, datable by their design to ca.
[2] Further study of the Cronin Point Site has potential to yield information related to the "protohistoric" period of sporadic contact between Native Americans and Europeans, prior to the intensive interactions of cross-continental trade and emigration.
It may also shed light of the impact of seismic events on the peoples and environments of the Oregon Coast.
[2][4] The Cronin Point Site was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2001.
This article about a property in Oregon on the National Register of Historic Places is a stub.