82 



AISIKSTUKIKS AKANEKUNIK 



[b. a. b. 



lagooii). Ays. — Mexia Rc'ixjrt (1586) hi Brooks 

 Coll. MS., Lib. Cons. Chaas.— Penlere (1821) as 

 quoted by Morse, Rep. to Sec. War, 311, 1822. 

 Chiaas. — Peiiiere, ibid., 1.50. Chias. — Peniiire, 

 ibid., 149. Is. — Barcia, Ensavo, 9.5. 1723. Jece. — 

 Dieliensoii ( 1699), Narr., 47, 1803. Ys.— Fairbanks, 

 Florida, 17.5, 1.S71. 



Aisikstukiks ( ' biters ' ). A band of the 

 Hiksika. 



Ai-sik'-stuk-iks. — Grinnell, Blackfoot Lodge 

 Tales, 209, 1892, 



Aitacomanes. Mentioned with the Oto- 

 comanes as a people oei-npying a province 

 that had been visited by the Dutch 

 tind "where the abundance of gold and 

 silver is such that all the vessels for their 

 use are of silver, and in some cases of 

 gold." The locality is not given, and 

 the province is pnjbably as imaginary as 

 the expedition in connection with which 

 it is mentioned. See Freytas, P^xped. of 

 Penalosa (16(i2), Sheatransl., 67, 1882. 



Aivilik (.'having walrus' ). An Eskimo 

 village on Repulse bay, Franklin dist., 

 Brit. Col., the principal winter settle- 

 ment of the Aivilirmiut. — Boas in 6th 

 Rep. B. A. E., 449, 1888. 

 A'-wee-lik,— McClintoek, Voy. of Fox, l(j3, 1881. 

 Ay-wee-lik, — Lvons, Priv. Journ., 161. 182.5. 

 Eiwili.—Klutsc'hak.Unterd. Eskimo, map, 48, 1881 

 Iwillichs.— Gilder, Schwatka's Search, 294, IS.Sl. 

 Iwillie.— Ibid., 304. Iwillik.— Ibid., 181. 



Aivilirmiut ( ' people of the walrus 

 place' ). A Central Eskimo tribe on the n. 

 shores of Hudson bay from Chesterfield 

 inlet to Fox channel, among whom Rae so- 

 journed in 1846-47, C. F. Hall in 1864-69, 

 and Schwatka in 1877-79. They kill 

 deer, muskoxen, seal, walrus, trout, and 

 salmon, caching a part of the meat and 

 blubber, which before winter they bring 

 to one of their central settlements. Their 

 chief villages are Akudiit, Avilik, Iglulik, 

 Maluksilak, Xuvung, Pikuliak, Ugluriak, 

 Ukusiksalik; sunmier villages are Inugsu- 

 lik, Kariak, Naujau, I'itiktaujang. — Boas 

 in 6th Rep. B. A. E., 445, 1888. " 

 Ahaknaiielet. — Petitot in Bib. Ling, et Ethnol. 

 Am.. III. xi, 1876 (so called l)y the Chiglit of 

 Liver|i(p(il bay: sig. ' women' ). A-hak-nan-helet. — 

 Richardson, .\rct. Exped,, i, 362, 1851. Ahaknan- 

 helik. — Richard.son, Polar Region.^ 300. 1861. 

 Ahwhacknanhelett. — Franklin, .lourney to Polar 

 Sea, u, 42, 1824. Aivillirmiut.— Boas in 6th Rep. 

 B. A. E.. 445, Ls88. Eivillinmiut.— Boas in Trans. 

 Anthrop. Soc. Wash., lii, 102, 1885. Eiwillik.— 

 Boas in Zeitschr. Ges. f. Erdk., 226, 1883. 



Aivino. A division of tlie Nevonie in 

 a pueblo of the same name on the w. 

 tributary of the Rio Yaqui, lat. 29°, s. 

 central JSonora, Mexico. The inhabi- 

 tants spoke a dialect' differing somewhat 

 from the Nevome proper, and their cus- 

 toms were similar to those of the Sisibo- 

 tari. 



Aibina. — Balbi quoted bv Orozco v Berra, Geog., 

 3.52, 1864. Albinos.— Kino et al. '(1694) in Doc. 

 Hist. Mex., 4th s., l, 399, 1856. Aivino.— Ribas, 

 Hist. Trium. Sa. Fee, 370, 164.5. Aybino.— Kino 

 et al., op. cit. 



Aiwanat {Aiwdnat, pi. oi Aiwan). The 

 Chukchi name for the Yuit Eskimo re- 

 siding at and near the vicinity of Indian 

 point, N. E. Siberia, as distinguished from 

 those who speak the dialect of the vil- 



lage of Nabukak on East cape and that 

 of CherinaknearC. Ulakhpen. — Bogoras, 

 Chukchee, 20, 1904. 



Aiyaho (a red-topped plant). A Zuni 

 clan, by tradition originally a part of the 

 Asa peojjle who afterward became Hopi. 

 Aiwahokwe.— Fewkes in 19tli Rep. B. A. E., 606, 

 1900. Aiyahe-kwe. -Gushing in 13th Rep. B. A. 

 E., 368, 1896 (A-ur = 'people'). Aiyahokwi.— 

 Stephen and Mindeleif in ,8th Rep.B. A. E., 30-31, 

 1891. OUa-jocue. — Gushing misquoted by Don- 

 aldson, Moqui Pueblo Inds., 88, 1893 (incorrectly 

 given as "Blue seed grass " people). Fetaa- 

 kwe.— Ibid.. 386 (former name). 



Aiyansh (' eternal bloom.' — Dorsey). 

 A mission village on the lower course 

 of Nass r., British Columbia, founded in 

 1871, its inhabitants being drawn from 

 Niska villages. Pop. 133 in 1901. 

 Aiyansh.— Can. Ind. Aff., 271, 1889. Aiyaush.— 

 Dorsey in Am. Antiq., xix, 281, 1897 (misprint). 



Akachumas. A former Chumashan vil- 

 lage near Santa Inez mission, Santa Bar- 

 bara CO., Cal. — Gatschet in Chief Eng. 

 Rep., pt. Ill, 553, 1876. 



Akachwa ( 'pine grove' ). ATarahumare 

 rancheria near Palanquo, Chihuahua, 

 Mexico. — Lumholtz, inf'n, 1894. 



Akaitchis. A tribe said to have resided 

 on Coll mbia r. not far from the mouth 

 of the Umatilla, in Oregon (Nouv. Ann. 

 des Voy., x, 78, 1821). Their location 

 would indicate a Shahaptian division, 

 but they can not be identified. 



Akaitsuk. A former Chumashan vil- 

 lage about Santa Inez mission, Santa Bar- 

 Imra co., Cal. 



A-kai't-suk,— Henshaw, Santa Inez MS. vocab., 

 B. A. E., I,s84. 



Akak. An Eskimo settlement in the 

 Nushagak district, Alaska, of onlv 9 peo- 

 ple in 1890. 

 Akakhpuk.— nth Census, Alaska, 164, 1893. 



Akamnik. AtriVjeof the Cpper Kutenai 

 living around Ft Steele and the mission 

 of St Eugene on upper Kootenai r., Brit. 

 Col. 

 Aqk'amnik.- Bjins in 5th Rep. N. W. Tribes Can., 



10, 18,S9. Aqk'a'mnik. — Chamberlain in 8th Rep. 

 N. W. Tribes Can., 6, 1892. 



Akanaquint ( 'green river' ). A Ute divi- 

 sion formerly living on Creen r., Utah, 

 belonging prol)ably to the Yampa. 

 Akanaquint.— Beckwith in Pac. R. R. Rep., ll, 61, 

 1855. Chaguaguanos. — Escudero, Not. NnevoM6x., 

 83, 1849. Changuaguanes, — Orozco y Berra, Geog.. 

 .59, 1864 (given as Faraon .\pache). Green river 

 band. — Cummin.tfs in Ind. Aft'. Rep., 153, 1866. 

 Green river tltahs.— Beckwith in Pac. R. R. Rep., 



11, 61, 18.55. Sabaguanas. — Domingnez and Esea- 

 lante (1776) in Doc. Hist. Mex.. 2a s., I, 537, 1854. 

 Sabuagana Gutas.— Escalante (1776) misquoted by 

 Harry in Simiison, Rep. of Explor. across Utah 

 in 1859, 494. 1876. Sabuaganas.— Dominguez and 

 Escalante, op. cit., 421. Saguaguana. — Escudero, 

 Not. Estad. de Chihuahua, '231, 1834. Yutas 

 sabuaganas. — Dominguez and Escalante (1776) in 

 Doc. Hist, Mex., '2a s., l, 415, 18.54. Zaguaganas, — 

 Cortez (1799) in Pac. R. R. Rep., ni, pt. 3, 120, 

 18.56. Zaguaguas.— Villa Seiior, Theatro Am., ii, 

 413, 1748. 



Akanekunik ( ' Indians on a river ' ) . A 

 tribe of the Upper Kutenai on Kootenai 

 r. at the Tobacco plains, Brit. Col. 

 Aqk'anequnik. — Boas hi 5th Rep. N. W. Tribes 

 Can., 10, 1889. Aqk'anequ'nik.— Chamberlain in 

 8th Rep. N. W. Tribes Can., 6, 1892. Tobacco 



