BULL. 30] 



ANOHU ANGMALORTTTK 



57 



ANCHOR STONE IN USE 

 BY CHIPPEWA ( 12 12 

 IN. LONG ) 



or marginal notches were ussnally rudely 

 pecked or clii})ped; but some show care- 

 ful treatment, and in a number of cases a 

 part or the whole of the surface of the 

 stone has been worked 

 down, probably for safety 

 and convenience in han- 

 dling, and in some ca:-e.^ 

 as a result of the habit of 

 reducing articles in com- 

 mon use to symmetrical 

 and somewhat artistic- 

 shapes. Snyder records one case of the 

 discovery of an anchor stone in an Indian 

 grave. These stones are still used by In- 

 dians as well as by white people. Consult 

 Snyder in Smithsbn. Rep. 1887, 1889; Eau 

 in Smithson. Cont., xxv, 1884. (w. h. h. ) 



Anchu. A Cochimi rancheria of San 

 Juan de Londo mission, Lower Califor- 

 nia. — Picolo in Stocklein, Neue Welt- 

 Bott, no. 72, 36, 1792. 



Andacaminos (Span.: 'wanderers,' 

 probably referring to their roving char- 

 acter). One of the tribes of w. Texas, 

 some at least of whose people were neo- 

 phytes of the mission of San Jose y San 

 Miguel de Aguayo. — Texas State Ar- 

 chives, Nov.i 1790. 



Andeguale. A Niska town inhabited 

 by two Chimmesyan families, the Lak- 

 seel of the Raven clan and the Gitgigenih 

 of the Wolf clan. — Boas in 10th Rep. N. 

 VV. Tribes, 48-49, 1895. 



Anderson Lake. A band of ITpper Lil- 

 looet on a lake of the same name in 

 British Columbia (Can. Ind. Aff., 415, 

 1898); pop. 66 in 1902. 



Anderson's Town. A former Delaware 

 village on the s. side of White r., about 

 the present Anderson, Madison co. , Ind. 

 (Hough, map in Ind. (ieol. Rep., 1883). 

 Named from the principal chief of the 

 Delawares of Indiana about 1810-20. 



Andesite. An eruptive rock, varying 

 from light gray of several hues to black, 

 belonging to the Tertiary and post-Ter- 

 tiary lavas, and much used l)y the Indians 

 for implements and utensils. It was 

 shaped mainly by the pecking and grind- 

 ing processes. Its distribution is very 

 wide, especially in the W. (w. h. h.) 



Andiata. A former Huron village in 

 Ontario.— Jes. Rel. of 1636, iii, 1858. 

 Andiatae.— Jes. Rel. of 1637, 134, 18,is. 



Andreafski. A Chnagmiut village on 

 the N. bank of the Yukon, Alaska, 5 m. 

 alxjve tlie former redouljt of that name, 

 for the nuirder of whose imnates in 1855 

 the Russians wreaked such vengeance 

 that the rivernatives neveragain molested 

 the whites. Pop. 14 in 1880; 10 in 1890. 

 Andreaffsky.— Dall, Alaska, 119, 1S7(I. Andreaf- 

 sky. — Haker, Geog. Diet. Alaska, 1901. Andreiev- 

 sky.— Petri iff, 10th Censu.s, Alaska, map, 1884. An- 

 dreivsky,— Xelson in 18th Rep. B. A. E., map, 1899. 



Andshankualth. The Lakmiut name of 

 a Yamel band on a w. tributary of the 



Willamette, in Oregon. — Gatschet, Cala- 

 pooyaMS., B. A. E., 1877. 



Andshimmampak. The Lakmiut name 

 of a Yamel liand on Yamhill cr., Ore- 

 gon. — ^Catschet, Calapoova MS., B. A. E., 

 1877. 



Anegado (Span, 'overflowed,' referring 

 to the c( )untry ) . A tribe of which Cabeza 

 de Vaca heard while in Texas in 1529-34. 

 They lived not far from the Yguases. 

 Anag'ados. — Cabeza de Vaca, Smith trans., 6(h ISiJl. 

 Anegados. — Ibiil.. 114, ed. 1871. Lanegados.^ 

 Ibid.. 112. 



Anejue. A former Chumashan village 

 near Santa Barbara, Cal. — Tavlor in Cal. 

 Farmer, Apr. 24, 1863. 

 Anijue.— BaiHToft, Nat. Raees, i, 459, 1874. 



Anektettim {AiiEjir'tUiii), 'stony little 

 hollow ' ). A village of the I^ytton band 

 of Ntlakyapamuk, situate on the e. side 

 of Eraser r. , 3 m. above Lytton, British 

 Columbia. — Teit in Mem. Am. Mus. Nat. 

 Hist., II, 172, 1900. 



Anelo. A Kaviagmiut Eskimo settle- 

 ment at Port Clarence, Alaska. — 11th 

 Census, Alaska, 162, 1893. 



Anemuk. An Unaligmiut Eskimy vil- 

 lage on Anvik r., Alaska. — Sen. Ex. Doc. 

 12; 42d Cong., 1st sess., 25, 1871. 



Anepo ('buffalo rising up.' — Hayden). 

 A division of the Kainah tribe of the 

 Siksika. 



A-ne'-po.— Morgan, Anc. Soc, 171, 1878 (said to be 

 the name of an extinct animal). I-ni'-po-i, — 

 Hayden, Ethnog. and Philol. Mo. Val., 264, 1862. 



Angakok. A magician or conjurer 

 among the Eskimo, the word for shaman 

 in tlie eastern Eskimo dialects, now much 

 used especially in American anthropo- 

 logical literature, (a. f. c.) 



Angmagsalingmiut ( ' with-capelins peo- 

 ple.' — Boas). A tribe of Eskimo on the 

 E. coast of Greenland, between lat. 65° 

 and 68°, inhabiting the fiords of Ang- 

 magsalik, Sermilik, and Sermiligak. 

 According to Rink the total population 

 was 413 in 1886. A Danish mission and 

 commercial station on Angmagsalic fiord 

 is the most northerly inhabited place on 

 the E. coast. p]ach Angmagsalingmiut 

 village consists of a single house, which 

 has room for 8 or 10 families. Holm 

 (Ethnol. Skizz. af Anmagsalikerne, 1887) 

 names 8 villages on the fiord, with a total 

 population of 225. Notwithstanding their 

 isolation the people, according to Nansen 

 (First Crossing of (ireeidand, 1, 211, 1890), 

 are among the mo.«t vigorous of the Es- 

 kimo. 



Angmagsalink. — Kink in (lioi;. Hliitt.. VITI, ;!.')0, 

 1886. 



Angmalook (Eskimo name). A species 

 of salmon {Sahno nitidiis) found in the 

 lakes of Boothia. — Rep. U. S. Fish Com., 

 122, 1872-73. 



Angmalortuk ('the round one'). A 

 Netchilirmiut winter village on the w. 

 coast of Boothia bay, Canada. 

 Angmalortoq.— Boas in 6th Rep. B. A. E., map, 1888. 



