178 



BUTTERFLY-STONES CACHE DISKS AND BLADES 



[b. a. e. 



property so as to look new. Indeed the 

 new fire meant the new hfe, physical and 

 moral, which had to begin with the new 

 year. Everything had to be new or re- 

 newed — even the garments hitherto worn. 

 Taken altogether, the busk was one of the 

 most remarkable ceremonial institutions 

 of the American Indians. (a. p. c. ) 



Bntterfly-stones. See Banner stones. 



Buzzard Roost. A Creek town "where 

 Tom's path crosses Flint r.,"Ga. ; exact 

 locality not known. There was another 

 Creek town of this name on upper Chat- 

 tahoochee r., w. of Atlanta.. See Ur- 

 quhart (1793) in Am. State Papers, Ind. 

 Aff., II, 370, 1832. 



Byainswa. See Biauswah. 



Byengeahtein. A Nanticoke village in 

 1707, jirobably in Dauphin or Lancaster 

 CO., Pa. — Evans (1707) in Day, Penn., 

 361, 1843. 



Caacat. A Chumashan village between 

 Goleta and Pt Concepcion, Cal., in 1542. 

 Caacac— Cabrillo, Narr., in Smith, Coll. Doc, 189, 

 l.S,57. Caacat.— Ibid. Cacat.— Taylor in Cal. 

 Farmer, Apr. 17, 1863. Cuncaae. — Ibid. 



Caamancijup ( ' narrows of the arro- 

 yos'). A rancheria, probably Cochimi, 

 connected with Pun'sima (Cadegomo) 

 mission, Lower California, in the 18th cen- 

 tury.— Doc. Hist. Mex., 4ths.,v, 189, 1857. 



Cabbasagunti. A small 1)ody of Indians 

 dwelling in 1807 in the village of "Saint- 

 Francais," on St Francis r., Quebec, in 

 which they were named Cabbassaguntiac, 

 i. e., ' people of Calmssaguntiquoke,' signi- 

 fying ' the place where sturgeon abound.' 

 The form Cobbisseconteag has been re- 

 placed by the modern Cobbosseecontee 

 as the name of what formerly was VVin- 

 throp pond and outlet which flows into 

 Kennebec r. , in Kennebec co. , Me. These 

 Indians, it is reported by Kendall, re- 

 garded themselves not only as inhab- 

 itants of Cabl)assaguntiquoke, but also as 

 true cahassa><, or sturgeons, because one of 

 their ancestors, having declared that he 

 was a sturgeon, leaped into this stream 

 and never returned in human form. They 

 related a tale that below the falls of 

 Cobbosseecontee r. the rock was hewn by 

 the ax of a mighty manito. (.i. n. b. h. ) 

 Cabbassaguntiac— Kendall, Travels, III, 124, 1809. 

 Cabbassaguntiquoke.— Ibid, (their former place of 

 settlement). 



Cabea Hoola. Given by Romans as a 

 former Choctaw village on the headwaters 

 of Chickasawhay cr., probably in liau- 

 derdale co., Miss. 



Cabea Hoala.— West Florida map., ca 1775. Cabea 

 Hoola.— Roman.s, Florida, 1772. 



Caborca. A rancheria of the Soba divi- 

 sion of the Papagoand the seat of amission 

 established by Kino about 1687; situated 

 on the s. bank of the Rio Asuncion, lat. 

 .30° .30^ long. 112°, Sonora, Mexico. It 

 had 4 subordinate villages in 1721 (Ven- 

 egas, II, 177, 285, 1759) and a population of 



223 in 1730, but it was totally destroyed in 

 the Pima rebellion of 1751. It is now a 

 white Mexican village. (f. w. h. ; 



Cabetka. — Kino, map (1702) in Stocklein, Neiie 

 Welt-B(>tt,7t),172(i. Cabona. — Box, Ad ventures, 2(i7, 

 ISrt). Caborca.— Kino (1696) in Doc. Hist. Mex., 1th 

 s.. I, 267, l.s,">6. Calorea.— Hardy, Travels.122, 1829. 

 Concepcion Caborca. — Rivera (17301 qnoteil by Ban- 

 eroft. No. .Me.x.. States, l,514, 18S4. Concepcion de Ca- 

 borca. — Venegas, Hist. Cal., l, 28.'i. 1759. Concepcion 

 del Cabetca. — Kino, map (1701) in Baneroft, Ariz, 

 and N. Me.x., 360, 1889 (misprint ). Concepcion del 

 Caborca.— Kino (1694) in Doc. Hist. Mex., 4th s., 

 I, 243, 18.56. Concepcion del Cabotea. — Writer of 

 1702?, ibid., v, 139, 1857. 



Caborb. A former Maricopa rancheria 

 on the Rio Gila, s. Ariz. (Sedelmair, 1744, 

 quoted by Bancroft, Ariz, and N. Mex., 

 366, 1 889 ) . Mentioned as distinct from the 

 following. 



Caborica. A former Maricopa rancheria 

 on the Rio Gila, s. Ariz. — Sedelmair 

 (1744) quoted by Bancroft, Ariz, and N. 

 Mex., 366, 1889. 



Cabusto (possibly from oka ' water,' ish- 

 to 'great.' — Halbert). A town, probably 

 of the Chickasaw, in n. e. Mississippi, vis- 

 ited by De Soto in 1540; situated between 

 Taliepatava and Chica^a, and 5 days' 

 march from the latter, near a great river, 

 possibly the Tombigbee. — Gentleman of 

 Elvas (1557) in French, Hist. Coll. La., ii, 

 160, 1850; Halbert in Trans. Ala. Hist. 

 Soc, in, 67, 1899. 



Caca Chimir. A Papago village, probably 

 in Pima co., s. Ariz., with a population of 

 70 in 1858, and 90 in 1865. 

 Caca Chimir.— Davidson in Ind. Aff. Rep., 135, 

 1865. Del Caca.— Bailey in Ind. Aflf. Rep., 208, 1858. 



Cacaria. A former Tepehuane pueblo 

 on tlie upper waters of the Rio San Pedro, 

 central Durango, Mexico. — Orozco y 

 Berra, Ge(.g., 319, 1864. 



Cacbanegtac. A former village, pre- 

 sumably Costanoan, connected with Dolo- 

 res mission, San Francisco, Cal. — Tavlor 

 in Cal. Farmer, Oct. 18, 1861. 



Cachanila. A village, probably Pima, 

 on the Pima and Maricopa res., Gila r., 

 Ariz.; pop. 503 in 1860 (Tavlor in Cal. 

 Farmer, June 19, 1863), 438 in 1869 

 (Browne). 

 Cachunilla.— Browne, Apache Country, 290, 1869. 



Cacbaymon. A village or tribe, possibly 

 Caddoan, mentioned by Il)erville (Mar- 

 gry, Dec, iv, 178, 1880), in the account of 

 his voyage up the Mississippi in 1699, as 

 being on or near Red r. of Louisiana. 

 Possil)ly identical with Cahinnio. 



Cache disks and blades. The term cache 

 is applied to certain forms of storage of 

 property (see Storage), and in archeol- 

 ogy it is employed to designate more 

 especially certain deposits of inii)lements 

 and other objects, mainl}^ of stone and 

 metal, the most noteworthy consisting 

 of flaked flint blades and disks. These 

 caches occur in the mound region of the 

 Mississippi valley and generally through- 

 out the Atlantic states. Very often they 



