Santa Barbara County, California - Biblioteka.sk

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Santa Barbara County, California
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Santa Barbara County
County of Santa Barbara
Images, from top down, left to right: The Santa Barbara County Courthouse; Lake Cachuma; Vandenberg Space Force Base's main gate; along Foxen Canyon Road, running between the Santa Maria and Santa Ynez Valleys; Danish-styled Solvang
Flag of Santa Barbara County
Official seal of Santa Barbara County
Map
Interactive map of Santa Barbara County
Location in the state of California
Location in the state of California
CountryUnited States
StateCalifornia
RegionCalifornia Central Coast
IncorporatedFebruary 18, 1850[1]
Named forThe city of Santa Barbara, which was named for Saint Barbara
County seatSanta Barbara
Largest citySanta Maria (population)
Santa Barbara (area)
Government
 • TypeCouncil–CEO
 • BodyBoard of Supervisors [2][3][4][5][6]
 • Chair [7]Steve Lavagnino (N.P.)
 • Vice Chair [8]Laura Capps (N.P.)
 • Board of Supervisors[9]
Supervisors
 • County executive officer[10]Mona Miyasato
Area
 • Total3,789 sq mi (9,810 km2)
 • Land2,735 sq mi (7,080 km2)
 • Water1,054 sq mi (2,730 km2)
Highest elevation6,803 ft (2,074 m)
Population
 (2020)
 • Total448,229
 • Density163/sq mi (63/km2)
Time zoneUTC−8 (Pacific Time Zone)
 • Summer (DST)UTC−7 (Pacific Daylight Time)
Area code(s)805, 820
GDP$26.135 billion (2017)[12]
GDP per capita$51,285 (2017) [13]
Congressional district24th
WebsiteCountyofSB.org

Santa Barbara County, officially the County of Santa Barbara (Spanish: Condado de Santa Bárbara), is located in Southern California. As of the 2020 census, the population was 448,229.[14] The county seat is Santa Barbara,[15] and the largest city is Santa Maria.

Santa Barbara County comprises the Santa Maria-Santa Barbara, CA Metropolitan Statistical Area. Most of the county is part of the California Central Coast.[16] Mainstays of the county's economy include engineering, resource extraction (particularly petroleum extraction and diatomaceous earth mining), winemaking, agriculture, and education. The software development and tourism industries are important employers in the southern part of the county.

Southern Santa Barbara County is sometimes considered the cultural boundary of Southern California/Northern California.[17]

History

The Santa Barbara County area, including the Northern Channel Islands, was first settled by Native Americans at least 13,000 years ago. Evidence for a Paleoindian presence has been found in the form of a fluted Clovis-like point found in the 1980s along the western Santa Barbara Coast, as well as the remains of Arlington Springs Man found on Santa Rosa Island in the 1960s. For thousands of years, the area was home to the Chumash tribe of Native Americans, complex hunter-gatherers who lived along the coast and in interior valleys leaving rock art in many locations, including Painted Cave.

Europeans first contacted the Chumash in AD 1542, when three Spanish ships under the command of Juan Rodríguez Cabrillo explored the area. The Santa Barbara Channel received its name from Spanish explorer Sebastián Vizcaíno when he sailed along the California coast in 1602; his ships entered the channel on December 4, the day of the feast of Santa Barbara. Spanish ships associated with the Manila Galleon trade probably made emergency stops along the coast during the next 167 years, but no permanent settlements were established.

The first land expedition to explore California, led by Gaspar de Portolà explored the coastal area in 1769, on its way to Monterey Bay. The party traveled the same route on the return to San Diego in January 1770. That same year, a second expedition to Monterey again passed through the area.[18] The DeAnza expeditions of 1774-76 followed Portola's trail.

Mission Santa Barbara from Mission Park, Santa Barbara

The Presidio of Santa Barbara was established in 1782 (4th of 5 in California), followed by Mission Santa Barbara in 1786 – both in what is now the city of Santa Barbara. The presidio and mission kept Vizcaino's denomination, as did the later city and county – a common practice which has preserved the names of many of the 21 California Missions. Other missions in Santa Barbara County are located in Santa Ynez and Lompoc.

European contacts had devastating effects on the Chumash people, including a series of disease epidemics that drastically reduced Chumash population. The Chumash survived, however, and thousands of Chumash descendants still live in the Santa Barbara area or surrounding counties. A tribal homeland was established in 1901, the Santa Ynez Reservation.[19]

Following the Mexican secularization of the missions in the 1830s, the mission pasture lands were mostly broken up into large ranchos and granted mainly to prominent local citizens who already lived in the area. 604 of these land grants were later confirmed by the state of California, with 36 in Santa Barbara County.[20]

Santa Barbara County was one of the 27 original counties of California, formed in 1850 at the time of statehood.[21] The county's territory was later divided to create Ventura County in 1873.[22]

Geography

South Coast of Santa Barbara County, view looking northeast, showing, from left to right, Isla Vista, Goleta, Hope Ranch, Santa Barbara. All the mountains except for the most distant in the right rear are in Santa Barbara County.
Coast of Santa Barbara and rugged back country. Courtesy: NASA Earth Explorer.[23]

According to the U.S. Census Bureau, the county has a total area of 3,789 square miles (9,810 km2), of which 2,735 square miles (7,080 km2) is land and 1,054 square miles (2,730 km2) (27.8%) is water.[24] Four of the Channel IslandsSan Miguel Island, Santa Cruz Island, Santa Rosa Island and Santa Barbara Island – are in Santa Barbara County. They form the largest part of the Channel Islands National Park (which also includes Anacapa Island in Ventura County).

Santa Barbara County has a mountainous interior abutting several coastal plains on the west and south coasts of the county. The largest concentration of population is on the southern coastal plain, referred to as the "south coast" – meaning the part of the county south of the Santa Ynez Mountains. This region includes the cities of Santa Barbara, Goleta, and Carpinteria, as well as the unincorporated areas of Hope Ranch, Summerland, Mission Canyon, Montecito, and Isla Vista, along with stretches of unincorporated area such as Noleta. The Gaviota Coast is a rural coastline north of Goleta. This last undeveloped stretch of Southern California coastline consists of dramatic bluffs, isolated beaches and terraced grasslands.[25] North of the Santa Ynez range in the Santa Ynez Valley are the towns of Solvang, Buellton, and Lompoc; the unincorporated towns of Santa Ynez, Los Olivos and Ballard; the unincorporated areas of Mission Hills and Vandenberg Village; and Vandenberg Space Force Base, where the Santa Ynez River flows out to the sea. North of the Santa Ynez Valley are the cities of Santa Maria and Guadalupe, and the unincorporated towns of Orcutt, Los Alamos, Casmalia, Garey, and Sisquoc. In the extreme northeastern portion of the county are the small cities of New Cuyama, Cuyama, and Ventucopa. As of January 1, 2006, Santa Maria has become the largest city in Santa Barbara County.[26]

The principal mountain ranges of the county are the Santa Ynez Mountains in the south, and the San Rafael Mountains and Sierra Madre Mountains in the interior and northeast. Most of the mountainous area is within the Los Padres National Forest, and includes two wilderness areas: the San Rafael Wilderness and the Dick Smith Wilderness. The highest elevation in the county is 6,820 feet (2,080 m) at Big Pine Mountain in the San Rafaels.

North of the mountains is the arid and sparsely populated Cuyama Valley, portions of which are in San Luis Obispo and Ventura Counties. Oil production, ranching, and agriculture dominate the land use in the privately owned parts of the Cuyama Valley; the Los Padres National Forest is adjacent to the south, and regions to the north and northeast are owned by the Bureau of Land Management and the Nature Conservancy.

Channel Islands

The four Channel Islands in Santa Barbara County are Santa Barbara Island, San Miguel Island, Santa Rosa Island, and the large Santa Cruz Island. All of them contain native and endemic wildlife, like the island oak and Torrey Pine. All four have the deer mouse living on them, the three latter, the island fox, and the two latter, the island spotted skunk. There used to be skunks on San Miguel Island, but due to predation from marine life, birds, and foxes, the San Miguel Island skunk has gone extinct.

Climate

Santa Barbara County has a mild warm-summer Mediterranean climate. Along the coast, temperatures rarely exceed 100 °F (38 °C) in the summer, but rarely dip below freezing in winter. In the interior, however, summertime temperatures can soar over 100 °F (38 °C). Above 2,000 feet (610 meters), temperatures can frequently fall below freezing during the winter months. The area experiences nearly all of its rainfall during the winter months, and rarely sees any rain at all during the summer months.

The area's dry, warm summers often lead to high wildfire danger in the fall. An example of this is the massive Thomas Fire, which started in Ventura County and rapidly spread into southern Santa Barbara County in December 2017. At the time, the fire was the largest wildfire ever to burn in California in terms of geographical size, but was topped only eight months later in the Mendocino Complex Fire in northern California. Heavy rainfall occurred the following January, causing massive mudslides and debris flows from the steep, fire-denuded hillsides. The community of Montecito was especially hard-hit. As of February 3, 2018, 21 are known dead and 2 are still missing.[27]

Air quality

Air quality in the county, unlike much of southern California, is generally good because of the prevailing winds off of the Pacific Ocean. The county is in attainment of federal standards for ozone and particulate matter. In July 2020 the county was designated as attainment for the state ozone standard, but it still does not attain the state PM10 standard.[28] the location where it's in plus the cities near it establishes the area's climate and meteorology influence how the pollution are diffused. Santa Barbara is considered a "Mediterranean Climate" due to the warm, dry summers, and cool winters.


Adjacent counties

National protected areas

Transition zone (back dunes) in Guadalupe-Nipomo Dunes National Wildlife Refuge

Demographics

Historical population
CensusPop.Note
18501,185
18603,543199.0%
18707,784119.7%
18809,51322.2%
189015,75465.6%
190018,93420.2%
191027,73846.5%
192041,09748.2%
193065,16758.6%
194070,5558.3%
195098,22039.2%
1960168,96272.0%
1970264,32456.4%
1980298,69413.0%
1990369,60823.7%
2000399,3478.0%
2010423,8956.1%
2020448,2205.7%
2023 (est.)441,257[29]−1.6%
U.S. Decennial Census[30]
1790–1960[31] 1900–1990[32]
1990–2000[33] 22010[34] 2020[35]

2020 census

Santa Barbara County, California - Demographic Profile
(NH = Non-Hispanic)
Race / Ethnicity Pop 2010[34] Pop 2020[35] % 2010 % 2020
White alone (NH) 203,122 184,746 47.92% 41.22%
Black or African American alone (NH) 7,242 6,467 1.71% 1.44%
Native American or Alaska Native alone (NH) 1,843 1,731 0.43% 0.39%
Asian alone (NH) 19,591 25,378 4.62% 5.66%
Pacific Islander alone (NH) 680 542 0.16% 0.12%
Some Other Race alone (NH) 790 2,378 0.19% 0.53%
Mixed Race/Multi-Racial (NH) 8,940 16,403 2.11% 3.66%
Hispanic or Latino (any race) 181,687 210,584 40.27% 46.98%
Total 423,895 448,229 100.00% 100.00%

Note: the US Census treats Hispanic/Latino as an ethnic category. This table excludes Latinos from the racial categories and assigns them to a separate category. Hispanics/Latinos can be of any race.

2011

Population, race, and income
Total population[36] 419,793
  White[36] 320,583 76.4%
  Black or African American[36] 7,752 1.8%
  American Indian or Alaska Native[36] 4,191 1.0%
  Asian[36] 20,905 5.0%
  Native Hawaiian or other Pacific Islander[36] 880 0.2%
  Some other race[36] 50,121 11.9%
  Two or more races[36] 15,361 3.7%
 Hispanic or Latino (of any race)[37] 175,692 41.9%
Per capita income[38] $30,330
Median household income[39] $61,896
Median family income[40] $71,695

Places by population and race

Zdroj:https://en.wikipedia.org?pojem=Santa_Barbara_County,_California
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