ANTHROPOLOGY. 



s:]7 



residence among the Eskimos of Baffiiilaiid. Mr. Lucien Turner will 

 soon publish an exhaustive iiJonogra])]i iipoii the Eskimo and Indian 

 populations of Ungava, a region about which little has hitherto been 

 kno^Yn. Add to these Schwatka's travels. Lieutenant Kay's report on 

 Point Barrow, Lieutenant Stoney's brief report on the Kowak, .'Mur- 

 doch's papers on arts at Point Barrow, Dr. Dall's address on the tribes 

 of Alaska, and we shall have ior this year a tolerably comprehensive 

 review of the Eskimo area. 



The following is Dr. Dall's outline of the tribes as at x>resent recog- 

 nized: «. 



Orarians. 



INNUIT STOCK. 



Northwestern Innuit: 



Kopag-mut, 1877 



Kang-mrdig'nmt, 1877 



Estimated population. 



Nuwuk-mut, 1877 I 



Nuwatog-mut, 1877 : 



Ku-ag'mut, 1877 3 



Asiatic Innuit: 



Yuit 



Island Innuit: 



Imah-kli-mut 



Ing-iih-kli-miit 



iShi-wo-kiig-mut 



Western Innuit: 



Kavifig'-mut, 1877 ") 



Mah'-le-raut, 1877 



)> D,I(!() 





Uu-alig'-mut, 1877 , 



Skdg'-mut, 1877 



Mag'emiit 



Kai a lig-mut j- 14,500 ^ 



Kuskwog'-mut 



Nushagag'-mut, 1877 



, Oglemtit 



Kaniag'-miit 



Chu-gach'igmut 



Aleutians: 



Unungun, 1877 2,LM>0 ''. 



Indians. 



\ 



TINNEH OK ATHABASCAN STOCK. 

 Western Tinneh: 



Kai'-yuh-kho-ta'ua, 1877 ...) 



Ko-yiV-kukhotiV-na, 1877 y L',0(tO! 



fJn'-a-kho ta'-na, 1877 . . \ 



