82 



ARDECO ARENDAHKONON 



[b. a. e. 



Trail, 1892; Boas in Rep. Nat. Mus. 

 1895, 1897; Catliii, N. Am. Inds., 18-41, 

 1866; Dawson in Proc. and Trans. Royal 

 Soc. Can., ix, 1891; De Bry, Colleetiones 

 Peregrinationum, 1590-1628; Dellen- 

 baugh, North Americans of Yesterday, 

 1901; Du Pratz, Hist. Lonisiane, iii, 1758; 

 Eells in Smithson. Rep. 1887, 1889; Fos- 

 ter, Prehist. Races, 1878; Goddard in 

 Univ. Cal. Pubs., i, no. 1, 1903; Harlot, 

 Narr. First Plant. Virginia, repr. 1893; 

 Hrdlicka in Am. Anthrop., vii, no. 3, 

 1905; Jackson in Metropol. ^lag., xxii, 

 no. 3, 1905; Lewis and Clark, Exped. 

 (1804-06), Coues ed., 1893; MacLean 

 Mound Builders, 1879; Moore, various 

 memoirs in Jour. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 

 1894-1905; Morgan in Cont. N. Am. 

 Ethnol., IV, 188f; Morice in Trans. Can. 

 Inst., IV, 1895; Niblack in Nat. Mus. 



N. ^\'. of them. The women are supposed 

 to be of ordinary stature. They hunt in 

 kaiaks and provide for their husl)ands, 

 who are covered with hair and are so tiny 

 that they carry them about in their 

 hoods. — Boas in 6th Rep. B. A. E., 640, 

 1888. 



Areitorae. A Papago village s. of So- 

 norita, Sonora, Mexico. — Box, Adven- 

 tures, 262, 1869. 



Arekw. A Yurok village on the coast 

 at the mouth of Redwood cr., n. w. Cal. 

 The town of Orick, 2 m. up the stream, 

 takes its name therefrom, (a. l. k.) 

 Oruk.— Gibba in Schoolcraft, Ind. Tribes, iii, 139, 

 1853. 



Arenal (Span.: 'sandy ground,' 'des- 

 ert'). A village, presumably Piman, on 

 the Pima and Maricopa res., Gilar., Ariz.; 

 pop. 557 in 1860 (Taylor in Cal. Farmer, 



MASONRY WALL, ANCIENT PUEBLO, NEW MEXICO. 



Rep. 1888, 1890; NordenskiOld, Cliff 

 Dwellers of the Mesa Verde, 1893; Pow- 

 ers in Cont. N. Am. Ethnol., in, 1877; 

 Schoolcraft, Ind. Tribes, i-vi, 1851-57; 

 Smith, Hist. Va., repr. 1819; Squier, 

 Antiq. N. Y. and West, 1851; Squier and 

 Davis in Smithson. Cont., i, 1848; Starr, 

 First Steps in Human Progress, 1895; 

 Swan in Smithson. Cont., x.xi, 1874; 

 Teit in Mem. Am. Mus. Nat. Hist., ii, 

 1900; Thruston, Antiq. of Tenn., 1897. 

 See Habitations, (w. h. h.) 



Ardeco. A small tribe or village, jirob- 

 ably Caddoan, indefinitely described as 

 on a s. w. branch of Arkansas r. in the 

 18th century.— La Harpe (1719) in Mar- 

 gry, Dec, vi, 299, 1886. 



Adero. — La Harpe, op. cit. Ardeco. — Beaurain in 

 Margry, op. cit. (mentioned with the Touacaro= 

 Tawakoni). 



Ardnainiq. A mythical people believed 

 bv the Central Eskimo to live far to the 



June 19, 1863), and 610 in 1869 (Browne, 

 Apache Country, 290, 1869). 



Arendahronon ( ' rock people ' ). One of 

 the four chief tribes of the Huron, having 

 the most easterly situation and claiming 

 to be the first allies of the French, who 

 founded among them the missions of St 

 Jean Baptiste, St Joachim, and Ste Elisa- 

 beth. In 1639 they were said to have 

 been resident of the Huron country for 

 about 50 years. In 1649, on the political 

 destruction and expulsion of the Huron 

 tribes by the Iroquois, the inhabitants of 

 St Jean Baptiste submitted in a body to 

 the Seneca, who adopted them. They 

 constituted the Stone, or Rock, tribe of 

 the Huron. See Jesuit Relation for 1639, 

 40, 1858. (.1. N. B. H.) 



Ahrenda.— Sliea, Catli. Miss., ]S2, 1S5-5. Ahrendah- 

 ronons. — Schoolcraft, Ind. Tribes, III, 522, 1853. 

 Ahrendaronons,— .les. liel. for 1640, <>!, 1.858. Aren- 

 da.— Charlevoix (1635), New France, ii, 72, 1872. 



