HULL. 30] 



AKATLIK AKPALIUT 



33 



Plains Kootanie. — Tolmie and Dawson, Comp. 

 Viicabs., 124b, 1884. Tobacco Plains Kootenay. — 

 Chamberlain, op. cit., tal>le o\>\)_ 41. Yaket-ahno- 

 klatak-makanay. — Tohnie and Dawson, o]i, cit. 

 Ya'k'et aqkinuqtle'et aqkts'ma'kinik. — Chainher- 

 lain, op. I'it., (1 ('Indians of the Tdliacco plains,' 

 from i/iVk-'rl tobaceo, (iiik-inuqtU''ct plain, 

 dqkt.-<' mil 'kin ik Indians) . 



Akatlik. A Yuit village on Plover bay, 

 Siberia. 



Akatlak.— Kranse in Deutsche Geogr. Bliitter, v, 

 80, map, 18.82. Akatlik.— Nelson in 18th Rep. 

 B. A. E., map, 1899. 



Akasquy. An extinct tribe, probably 

 Caddoan, visited ])y La Salle in Jan., 

 1687, when its people resided Itetween 

 the Pa]a(|iiesson and the Penoy in the 

 vicinity of Brazos r. , Tex. They made 

 cloth of buffalo wool and mantles deco- 

 rated with bird feathers and the " hair 

 of animals of every color." See Cavelier 

 in Shea, Pearly Voy., 39, 1861. „ (a.c.f.) 



Akawenchaka (Onondaga: A-ka-wench- 

 ha-ka). A small band that formerly 

 lived in North Carolina, now numl)ering 

 about 20 individuals, incorporated with 

 the Tuscarora in New York. They are 

 not regarded as true Tuscarora. — Hewitt, 

 Onondaga MS., B. A. E., 1888. 

 Kauwetsaka. — Cusick (182.^) quoted byMaeauley, 

 N. Y., II, 17,s, 1829 (mentioned as a settlement in 

 N.C. ). Kauwetseka. — Cusick, Sketches Six Na- 

 tions, 34, 1828. 



Akawiruchic ( ' place of much fungus ' ). 

 A Tarahumare rancheria near l^alanquo, 

 Mexico. — Lumholtz, inf'n, 1894. 



Akchadak-kochkond. A coast village 

 of the ]\Ialemiut in Alaska. — Zagoskin 

 in Nouv. Ann. Vov., 5th s., xxr, map, 

 1850. 



Akerninak. A settlement of East Green- 

 land P^skimo on Sermilik fiord; ])op. 12 

 in 1884. — Holm, Ethnol. Skizze af Ang- 

 magsalikerne, 14, 1887. 



Akgulurigiglak. An Eskimo village in 

 the Nushagak district, Alaska; pop. 61 in 

 1890.— Eleventh Census, Alaska, 164, 

 1893. 



Akhiok. A Kaniagmiut village on Ali- 

 tak hav, Kodiak id., Alaska; pup. 114 in 

 1880, slightly more than 100 in 1900. 

 Achiok,— Hohnberg, Ethnol, Skizz., map, 142, 1855. 

 Akhiok,— PetrofY, 10th Census, Alaska, 29, 1884. 

 Alitak.— 11th Cen.sus, Alaska, 5, 1893. Kaschjuk- 

 wagmjut.— Holmberg, op. cit. Kashukvagmiut,— 

 Russ. Am. Co., map, 1849. Oohaiack,— Lisianski, 

 Vov. (1805), quoted bv Baker^ Geog. Diet. Alaska, 

 19t)l. Uhaiak.— Baker, ibid. 



Akiachak. A Kuskwogmiut village on 

 Kuskokwim r., Alaska; pop. 43 in 1890, 

 165 in 1900. 



Akiakchagmiut.— llth Census, Alaska, 164, 1893. 

 Akiatshagamut. — Spurr and Post quoted by Baker, 

 Geog. Diet. Alaska, 1901. 



Akiak. A Kuskwogmiut village on 

 Kuskokwim r., .30 m. above Bethel; pop. 

 175 in 1880, 97 in 1890. 



Ackiagmute,— Petroff, Rep. on Alaska, map, 1884. 

 Akiagamiut,— llth Census. Alaska, 104, 1893. Aki- 

 agamute. -Hallock in Nat. Geog. Mag., ix, 1898, 

 Akiagmut,— Spurr and Post quoted by Baker, 

 Geog. Diet. Alaska, 1901. Akkiagamute.— Petroff, 

 op. cit., 53. Akkiagmute,— Ibid., 17. 



Akiskenukinik ('people of the two 



lakes'). A tribe of the Upper Kuteuai 

 Bull, 30-05—3 



living on the Columbia lakes, having 

 their chief settlement at Windermere, 

 Brit. Col. They numbered 72 in 1902. 

 Akiskinookaniks, — NVilson in Trans. Ethnol. Soc. 

 Lend., 304, 1866. AqkiskaniikEnik.— Boas in 5th 

 Rep. N. W. Tribes Can., 10, 1889, Aqki'sk-Enii'- 

 kinik.— Chamberlain in 8th Rep. N. W. Tribes 

 Can., 6, 1892, Columbia Lakes,— Ibid., 7, 



Akiyenik (Aqklye'nik, 'people of the 

 leggings ' ) . A tribe of the tapper Kutenai 

 living on L. Pend d' Oreille, Idaho. — 

 Boas in 5th Rep. N. \V. Tribes Can., 10, 

 1889. 



Aklut ( ' provisions ') . A Kuskwogmiut 

 village on Kuskokwim r. at the mouth 

 of the Eek, Alaska; pop. 162 in 1880, 106 

 in 1890. 



Ahguliagamut.— llth Census, Alaska, 164, 1893. 

 Aklukwagamut. — Spurr and Post iiuotcd by Baker, 

 Geog. Diet, .\laska, 1901. Akooligamute.— Petroflf, 

 Rep. on Alaska, 17, 1884; Nel.son (1878) quoted by 

 Baker, op. cit. 



Akmiut. A Kuskwogmiut village on 

 Kuskokwim r., 10 m. above Kolmakof, 

 Alaska. 

 Akmute,— petroff, 10th Census, Alaska, map, 18,84. 



Akol (.I'A-o^. An organization among 

 the Pima, apparently gentile, belonging 

 to the Suwuki Ohimal, or Red Ants, 

 phratral group. — Russell, Pima MS., 

 B. A. E., 313, 1903. 



Akonapi (possibly related to the Chip- 

 pewa akunahiiu'lsi, ' he is good at getting 

 game ' ; -ikij)- is a secondary stem refer- 

 ring to a human person. Another form 

 is (Chivftriiiii; "mini refers to 'man.' — 

 Wm. Jones). A people mentioned in the 

 ancient Walahi O/ioii record of the Dela- 

 wares (Brinton, LenApe Legends, 190, 

 231, 1885), with whom they fought dur- 

 ing their migrations. Brinton, who iden- 

 tifies them with the Akowini of the same 

 tradition, thinks it i)r()l)al)le that they 

 lived immediately x. of Ohio r. in Ohio or 

 Indiana. He regards Akowini as "corre- 

 spondent" with Sinako, and Towakon 

 with Towako; the latter he identifies 

 with the Ottawa, called by the Delawares 

 Tuway. If this identification be correct, it 

 is likely that the Akonapi were the Sinago 

 branch of the Ottawa, (c. t. ) 



Ahkonapi.— Walam Ohim (1833) in Brinton, Len- 

 fipe Leg., 190, 1885, Akbonapi, — Ibid. Akowini.— 

 Ibid., 198. 



Akonye ('people of the canyon'). An 

 Apache band at San Carlos agency and 

 Ft Apache, Ariz., in 1881; probably' coor- 

 dinate with the Khonagani clan of the 

 Navaho. — Bourke in Journ. Am. Folk- 

 Lore, III, 111, 1890. 



Nar-go'-des-giz'-zen. — White, Apache Names of 

 Ind. Tribes, MS,, B. A. E. 



Akorninarmiut. A village of the south- 

 ern group of East Greenland Eskimo, be- 

 tween lat. 63° and 64°; pop., with three 

 other villages, 135. — Rink in Geog. Blat- 

 ter, VIII, 346, 1886. 



Akpaliut. A Kaviagraiut village w. of 

 Golofnin bay, on Norton sd., Alaska; pos- 

 siblv the same as Chiukak. 

 Acpa'Uiut.- W. II. Tel. map, 1.S67, cited bv Baker, 

 (icog. Diet. Ala.ska, 1901, 



