290 APPENDIX. 



Schedules of Consanguinity and Affinity of the Ganowanian Family. — Continued. 



Indian Nations. 



68. TUKUTHE. 



69. Spokane. 

 '70. Okinaicen. 



Tl. Yakama. 



72. Kootenay. 



73. TJtahs. 



74. Laguna. 



75. Tesuque. 



76. Chontal. 



77. Chibcha 



Names by wliich tliey call 

 themselves. 



Sin-hu, " People wear- 

 ing Red Paint on their 

 Cheeks." 



0-kan-a-kan. Significa- 

 tion not obtained. 



Tabegwaches. Signifi- 

 cation not obtained. 



Persons by whom and Places wliere the Schedules 

 were filled. 



R. McDonald, Esq., Peel River Fort, Hudson's Bay 



Territory, June, 1865, a factor of the company. 

 George Gibbs, Esq., of the Northwestern Boundary 

 Survey, Steilacoom, Washington Territory, No- 

 vember, 1860. 

 Lewis H. Morgan, at Red River Settlement, Hud- 

 son's Bay Territory, August, 1861, from Mrs. Ross, 

 an Okenakan woman from Washington Territory, 

 and her daughter. 

 George Gibbs, Esq., Steilacom, Washington Terri- 

 tory, July, 1860. 

 George Gibbs, Esq., July, 1860. 

 Robert Kennicott, Esq., Washington, July, 1863, from 



a delegation of Utahs at the seat of government. 

 P^ev. Samuel Gorman, Missionary of Baptist Board, 



Pueblo of Laguna, New Mexico, May, 1860. 

 Michael Steck, M. D., U. S. Indian Agent for the 

 Pueblo Indians of New Mexico, Santa Fe, March, 

 1865. 

 Guillermo Garcia, State of Tabasco, May, 1860. It 

 was procured at the instance of Don Augustin 

 Vilaseca, of the city of Tabasco. 

 E. Uricoechea, M.D., Ph. D., Bogota, New Grenada, 



March, 1861. 

 James R. Clare, Esq., York Factory, Hudson's Bay 

 TeiTitory, Augu.st, 1860, at the request of Prof. 

 Daniel Wilson, of University College, Toronto, 

 Canada West. 

 Samuel Kleinschmidt, Godlhaab, Greenland, August, 

 1862. Procured through Dr. Rink, Director-Gene- 

 ral of Greenland, and Hon. Bradford R. Wood, 

 TJ. S. Minister Resident at Copenhagen. 

 Lewis H. Morgan, at New York, November, 1862, 

 from E-pe-oke'-pe, an Eskimo from Northumber- 

 land Inlet, and Tii-kii-re'-tu, his wife, brought down 

 by Capt. C. F. Hall, the Arctic explorer, who as- 

 sisted in the work. 



