612 TUSAYAN MIGRATION TRADITIONS LETH. ANN. 19 
them resettled there when they went back. These ** Joso” (Hopi) were 
probably Tewa from the East mesa, and as some of the Asa returned 
to the Rio Grande in the middle of the eighteenth century, it would be 
quite natural for the Tewa to call the old pueblo on the site of Abi- 
quiu Josoge (** Hopi pueblo”). 
The Asa people, like the Honani, brought some katcinas to Walpi, 
among which may be mentioned Teakwaina. In the winter solstice 
meeting of the Asa, at which their peculiar fetishes are exhibited in 
the kiva, the Asa display as an heirloom an old mask called Teakwaina, 
which they claim to have brought with them when they came into the 
country. There is a striking likeness between this mask and those of 
Natacka, and it is suspected that the Asa brought the Natacka to the 
East mesa. It is instructive to note that the Asa are not represented 
in the Middle mesa pueblos and Oraibi, and important light could be 
shed on this question if we knew that the Natacka were also unrepre- 
sented in these villages. The author suspects, on good ground, that 
the Oraibi have no Natacka in the Powamti ceremony. 
The similarity in symbolism between the masks of Teakwaina, 
Natacka, and Calako taka is noteworthy, and it is not impossible that 
they are conceptions derived from Zuni or some Zuni settlement. 
The home of Calako was the present ruin of Winima, near St Johns, 
Arizona, from which place the Zuni Calako came, according to both 
Hopi and Zuni legends. The Hopi Calako is said to have come from 
the same place. It is likewise highly probable that the Asa introduced 
several other katcinas besides the Teakwainas. Sichumoyi, the present 
home of the Asa, is often called a Zuni pueblo, probably because it 
was settled by Asa (Aiwahokwe) clans from Zuni. This is probably 
the Hopi town which the Zuiis say is one of their pueblos in the Hopi 
country. 
Asa people at Walpi 


Men and boys Women 
; Ametola Wukomana 
Nivati 
Sunoitiwt 
| Hauta 
Kiazru 

Hayo 
Tu'kia 
Afiwuci 
Talahoya (Soyoko) 
Mu'na 

