BULL. 30] 



ATUYAMA AVAK 



117 



Cont. N. A. Ethnol., in, 267, 1877. Tuqteumi.— Cur- 

 tin, MS. Ilmawi vocab., B. A. E., I,ss9 (Ilmawi 

 name). 



Atuyama. A pueblo of New Mexico in 

 159S; (lou))tless situated in the Salinap, 

 in the vicinity of Abo, and evidently oc- 

 cupied by the Tigua or the Piron. — Onate 

 (1598) in Doc. Ined., xvi, 114, 1871. 



Auarkat. A settlement of East Green- 

 land Eskimo, lat. 59°. — Meddelelser om 

 Gronland, xxv, map, 1902. 



Aubbeenaubbee ( Wdbdndbd, ' morning 

 person,' a mythic being. — W. J. ). A Pot- 

 awatomi chief of this name occupied a 

 village, commonly known as Aubbee- 

 naubbee's village, on a reservation in the 

 present Aubbeenaubbee tp., in Fulton co., 

 Ind. The tract was sold by the treaty of 

 Tippecanoe r. in 1836. Other forms of the 

 name are AubV)anaubba, Aubbanaubbee, 

 Aubeenaubee, Aubinaubee. (.t. m.) 



Aubomesk (probably 'white beaver'). 

 A village of the Powhatan confederacy, 

 in 1608, on the n. bank of the Rappa- 

 hannock, in Richmond co., Va. — Smith 

 (1629), Virginia, i, map, repr. 1819. 



Aucheucaula. A former Creek town 

 situated on the e. bank of Coosa r., in the 

 extreme n. w. corner of Coosa co., Ala. — 

 Royce in 18th Rep. B. A. E., Ala. map, 

 1900. 



Aucocisco. The name of the territory 

 about Casco bay and Presumpscot r., in the 

 area now included in Cumberland co., Me. 

 It was also sometimes apj)lied to those 

 Abnaki Indians by whom it was occu- 

 pied. Since the section was settled at an 

 early date by the whites, the name soon 

 dropped out of use as applied to the In- 

 dians, or rather it was changed to 

 " Casco," but this was a mere local desig- 

 nation, not a tribal distinction, as the In- 

 dians referred to were Abnaki. The proper 

 form of the word is given by Willis as 

 Uh-kos-is-co, 'crane' or 'heron,' the first 

 syllable being guttural. These birds still 

 frequent the bay. It is said by Willis to 

 have been the Indian name of Falmouth 

 (Portland), Me. 



Ancocisco. — Smith (1629), Virginia, n, 177, repr. 

 1,S19 (misprint). Aucasisco, — Schoolcraft, Ind. 

 Tribes, in, 545, 1.8,53. Aucocisco,— Smith (1629), 

 Virginia, ll, 193, repr. 1819. Aucosisco,— Drake, 

 Bk. Inds., vi, 1848. Casco,— Sullivan in Mass. Hist. 

 Soc. Coll., 1st s., IX, 210, 1S04 ("Casco Indians"). 

 Quack.— Levett (1628) in Mass. Hist. Soc. Coll., 3d 

 s., VIII, 168, 1,S43 (same?). TJh-kos-is-co.— Willis in 

 Me. Hist. Soc. Coll., i, 31, 1S31, repr. 18.58. 



An Glaize. Mentioned by Drake (Bk. 

 Inds., bk. 5, 63, 1848) as if a Delaware vil- 

 lage on the s. w. [s. e.] branch of the 

 Miami of the Lake (Maumee r. ), Ohio. 



Augpalartok ( ' the red one,' designating 

 a cliff. — Boas). An Eskimo village in w. 

 (ireenland, lat. 72° 53^. — Meddelelser om 

 Gronland, viii, map, 1889. 



Augustine. A rancheria and reserva- 

 tion of 615 acres of desert land occupied 

 by Mission Indians; situated 75 m. from 



the Mission Tule River agency, s. Cal. — 

 Rep. Ind. Aff., 175, 1902. 



Auk. A Koluschan tribe on Stephens 

 passage, Douglas and Admiralty ids., 

 Alaska; pop. 640 in 1880-81, 279 in 1890. 

 Their chief town was called Anchguhlsu. 

 The other settlements mentioned by 

 Petroff were probably summer camps. 

 One such camp was Tsantikihin, now 

 called Juneau. The social divisions are 

 Tlenedi and Wushketan. (.i. r. s. ) 

 Ahkootskie.— Elliott, Cond. AfF. Alaska, 227, 1875 

 (transliterated from Veniaminoff). Ak-kon. — 

 Krause, Tlinkit Ind., 116, 1885. Akutskoe,— Ve- 

 niaminoff, Zapiski, li, pt. 3, 30, 1.H40. Armos.- 

 Scott in Ind. Aff. Rep., 309, 1868 (proljablymisiirint 

 for Awks). Auke. — Kane, Wand, in N. Am., app., 

 18.59. Auke-qwan. — Emmons in Mem. Am. Mus. 

 Nat. Hist., HI, 233, 1903. Awks.— Halleek in Rep. 

 Sec. War, pt. 1,38,1868. 



Aukardneling. A village of the Talir- 

 pingmiut division of the ( )komiut Eskimo 

 on the w. side of Cumberland sd. 

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



Aukpatuk ('red'). A Suhinimiut Es- 

 kimo village onUngava bay, Labrador. — 

 Hind, Lab. Pen., ii, map, 1863. 



Aukumbumsk. A Pequot village in the 

 center of their country and the residence 

 of their chief before the coming of the 

 English, in 1636; probably in New Lon- 

 don CO., Conn. 



Aukumbumsk. — Trumbull, Ind. Names Conn.. 7, 

 1881 ( Mohcuan form). Awcumbucks. — Ibid. (Nar- 

 raganset form). 



Aulintac. A Costanoan village at Santa 

 Cruz mission, Cal. The name has been 

 taken for a dialectic division of the Costa- 

 noan family. 



Aureuapeugh. A village of the Pow- 

 hatan confederacy, in 1608, on Rappahan- 

 nock r., in Essex co., Va. — Smith (1629), 

 Virginia, i, map, repr. 1819. 



Auriferous gravel man. See Calaveras 

 Man. 



Ausion. A former Chumashan village 

 near Purisima mission, Santa Barbara 

 CO., Cal. — Taylor in Cal. Farmer, Oct. 

 18, 1861. 



Ante. An Apalachee (?) town on the 

 coast of Apalachee bay, Fla., first visited 

 by Narvaez in 1528. It lias been identi- 

 fied in location with St Marks. 

 Ante.— French, Hist. Coll. La., ii, 246, 1875 (mis- 

 primt). Aute.— Cabeza de Vaca, Smith trans., 38, 

 1871 (Smith identifies it with Ochete). Autia. — 

 Linschoten,Desc.derAm^>r., 6, 1638. Haute.— Gal- 

 latin in Trans. Am. Ethnol. Soc, ii, Ivi, 1848. 



Antiamque. The town, possibly Cad- 

 doan, where De Soto's troops went into 

 winter quarters in 1541-42. It had an 

 abundance of maize and provisions, and 

 lay on the same river as Cayas, appar- 

 ently Arkansas r. 



Autiamque,— Gentl.of Elvas(1557) in French, Hist. 

 Coll. La , II, 181, 1850. TJtiangue.— Rafinesque, 

 introd. Marshall, Ky., I, 35, 1824. TJtianque.— 

 Shipp, De Soto and Pla., 683, 1881. Vicanque.- 

 Biedma in French, op. cit., 107. Viranque.— 

 Biedma in Smith, CoUec. Docs. Fla., 61, 1857. 

 Vtiangue.— Garcil.issd de la Vega, Fla., 193, 1723. 



Avak. A Yuit Eskimo village near Cape 

 Chukotsky, n. e. Siberia; pop. 101 in 16 



