Point Conception (Chumash: Humqaq; Spanish: Punta Concepción) is a headland along the Gaviota Coast in southwestern Santa Barbara County, California, United States. It is the point where the Santa Barbara Channel meets the Pacific Ocean, and as the corner between the mostly north-south trending portion of coast to the north and the east-west trending part of the coast near Santa Barbara, it makes a natural division between Southern and Central California, Characteristic patterns of shelf circulation at the boundary between central and southern California and is commonly used as such in regional weather forecasts. NWS Coastal Waters Forecast, accessed 3/18/2013. Point Conception Light is at its tip and the Jack and Laura Dangermond Preserve covers some of the surrounding land.
It is called Humqaq ("The Raven Comes") in the Chumashan languages.
In 1978, the Point Conception area was occupied "by Chumash and other Native Americans trying to save it from development by a liquefied natural gas company."
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