HILL. 30] 



CHUKAIMINA CHULUFICHI 



295 



Chukaimina. A Mariposan trilie for- 

 merly near Kings r., Cal. According to 

 Powers (Cont. N. A. Ethnol., iii, ;^70, 

 1877) tliey were in Squaw valley, Fresno 

 CO. , and here Merriam found a few fami- 

 lies in 1903. 



Cho-co-men-as. — Johnston in Sen. Ex. Doc. 61, 32d 

 Cong., Istse^s., 23, lsrv2. Cho-ke-me-nes. — Barbour 

 in Sen. Ex. Doc. 4, 32(1 Cong., spec, scss., 252, 1853. 

 Cho-ke-min-nah.— Wcssells (lsr)3) in II. R. Kx. Doc. 

 7(), 3-4th Cong., 3d scs.s., 31, 1857. Cho-kem-nies. — 

 Lewis in Ind. Afl. Rep. 1857, 399, 1S5S. Chokia- 

 mauves, — Bancroft, Nat. Races, I, 4n(\, 1S74 (mis- 

 quoted from Taylor). Chokimauves. — Taylor in 

 Cal. Farmer, June 8, 18tl(». Cho-ki-me-nas. — Ind. 

 Aff. Rep., 223,18.51. Cho-ki'-min-ah.— Merriam in 

 Science, xix, 915, 1904. Chu-kai'-mi-na, — Powers 

 in Cont. N. A. Ethnol., in, 370, 1877. 



Chukanedi ( ' bush or grass people ' ) . A 

 clan among the Iluna division of theTlin- 

 git, belonging to the Wolf ])hratry. An- 

 ciently they are said to have stood low in 

 the social scale. Their jirincipal emblem 

 wa.s the porpoise. 



Tcii'kAnedi.— Swanton, field notes, B. A. E., 1904. 

 Tschukane'di.— Krau.se, Tlinkit Ind., 118, 188.5. 



Chukchagemiut. A subdivision of the 

 Chnagmiut p]skimo whose chief village is 

 Chukchuk, on the Yukon delta, Alaska. 

 Chukchag'emut. — Dall in Cont. N. A. Ethnol., 1, 17, 

 1877 (the people) . Chukchuk.— Baker, Geog. Diet. 

 Alaska, 1901 (the village). 



Chukchansi. A Mariposan tribe, form- 

 ing one of the northern divisions of the 

 family, the remnants of which now oc- 

 cupy the foothill country between Fresno 

 cr. on the n. and San Joaquin r. on the s., 

 from a little above Fresno Flat down to 

 the site of old Millerton, Cal. (Merriam 

 in Science, xix, 915, June 17, 1904). In 

 1861 they were on Fresno reserve and 

 numbered 240. Naiakawe, a noted 

 prophet about 1854, was a member of this 

 tribe, and Sloknich was chief about the 

 same time. (a. l. k.) 



Choocchanceys, — Lewis in Ind. Aff. Rep. 1856, 256, 

 1857. Chook-chan-cie.— Rovce in 18th Rep. B. A. 

 E., 822, 1899. Chook-chancy.— Johnston (1851) in 

 Sen. Ex. Doc. 4, :'>2<1 Cong., spec, sess., 64, l.s.53. 

 Chook-cha-nees.— Biirhdur (is.52), ibid., 262. Chook- 

 chau-ces.— McKee et al. (1S51), ibid., 74. Chook- 

 chaw-ces. — McKee et al. in Ind. .\ff. Rep., 223, 

 1851. Chook-chuncy, — Savage (1851) in Sen. Ex. 

 Doc. 4, 32d Cong., spec, sess., 231, l.s,53. Choot- 

 chancers. — Johnston (1851) in Sen. E.x. Doc. 61, 

 32d Cong., 1st .sess., 22, 1852. Chuckehalins.— Bar- 

 bour et al. (1851) in Sen. Ex. Doc. 4, 32d Cong., 

 spec, sess., 61,1853. Chuk-chan'-cy.— -.Merriam in 

 Science, xix, 915, June 17, 1904. Chuk'-chan-si.— 

 Powers in Cont. N. A. Ethnol., in, 370, 1877. 

 Chu-ke-chan-se.— Wessells (1853) in H. R. Ex. Doc. 

 76, 34th Cong., 3d .sess., 30, 18.57. Cookchaneys,— 

 Henley in Ind. Aff. Rep., 612, l.s54. Cove-chan- 

 ces,— Ind. Aff. Rep., 219, 1861. Suksanchi,— Kroe- 

 ber, inf'n, 1903 (Yaudanchi name). 



Chukchukts. A Squawmish village 

 comnmnity on the left bank of Squaw- 

 misht r., Brit. Col. 



Tcuk'tcuk'ts.- Hill-Tout in Rep. Brit. \.A. S.,474 

 1900. 



Chukela. A Yuit Eskimo village in 

 Siberia, w. of C. Chukoshki. — Jackson, 

 Reindeer in Alaska, map, 145, 1894. 



Chukeu ( Tcuqfe-iY, ' mouth of the 

 tide' ). A Haida town on the s. w. coast 



of Moresby id., n. w. Brit. Col., said 

 to have been so named from an inlet in 

 and out of which the tide rushes with 

 great force. It was occupied by the 

 Sakikegawai, a family of Ninstints. — 

 Swanton, Cont. Ilaida, 277, 1905. 



Chukhuiyatlil. A Kuitsh village on 

 lower Umpqua r., Oreg. 



Tc'u-qu'-i-yafl'. — Dorsey in Jour. Am. Folk-lore, 

 in, 231, 1890. 



Chukkilissa. One of five hamlets com- 

 posing the former Choctaw town of 

 Imongalasha, in the present Neshoba co.. 

 Miss.— Halbert in Miss. Hist. Soc. Publ., 

 VI, 432, 1902. 



Chukotalgi ( 'toad ' ) . An extinct Creek 

 clan, closely affiliated with the Toad or 

 S()])aktalgi clan. 



Tchukotalgi. — Gatscliet, Creek Migr. Leg., l, 155, 

 1884. Tsuxodi.— Ibid. 



Chukubi. A traditional settlement situ- 

 ated a mile n. e. of Shipaulovi, n. e. Ari- 

 zona. It was occupied by the Scjuash, 

 Sand, and other clans of the Hopi, who 

 were afterward joined by the Spider clan. 

 Being harassed by enemies, among them 

 the Ute and the Apache, it was aban- 

 doned, its inhabitants joining those of 

 old Mashongnovi in building the present 

 Mashongnovi pueblo. 



Chukubi.— Stephen and Mindelelf in ,sth Rep. B. 

 A. V:.. 25, .-i8, IS'.tl; Fewkes in 17th Re].. B. A. E., 

 .538, 189S. Chukuvi.— Voth, Traditions (if the Hopi, 

 40, 1905. 



Chukukh. A Kuitsh village on lower 

 Umpqua r., Oreg. 



Tc'u-kiikq'. — I)orsey in Jour. Am. Folk-lore, in, 

 23iriS90. 



Chula ('fox'). A former Yazoo tribe, 

 confederated with the Chickasaw, on or 

 near the headwaters of Yazoo r., Miss. 

 A village called Tchula is now in Holmes 

 CO., Miss. 



Chola.— Gatschet, Creek Migr. Leg., I, 99, 1884. 

 Choula.— La Harpe (1721) in French, Hist. Col'. 

 La., in, 106, 1851. Foxes. — Gatschet, op. cit. 

 Tchiila.— Ibid. 



Chulare. A former village of the Cha- 

 lone division of the Costanoan family, 

 situated in the vicinity of the present 

 Guadalupe rancho, near Soledad mission, 

 Cal. Chualar, a post-ofhce in Salinas 

 valley, is probably the same name. 

 Achulares.— Taylor in Cal. Farmer, Apr. 20, 1860. 

 Chulares. — Ibid. 



Chulik, A fishing station of the Nuni- 

 vagmiut on Nunivak id., Alaska. Pop. 

 62 in 1890, comprising two villages called 

 Chuligmiut and Upper Chuligmiut (11th 

 Census, Alaska, 114). 



Chulithltiyu. A Yaquma village on the 

 s. side of Yaquina r., Oreg. 

 Tcul-lifl'-ti-yu,^Dorsev in Jour. Am. Folk-lore, 

 in, 229, 1.S90. 



Chulufichi. A phratry of the ancient 

 Timucua of Florida. Its clans were 

 Arahasomi, Habachaca, and several oth- 

 ers not recorded. — Pareja (1614) quoted 

 by Gaschet in Proc. Am. Philos. Soc, 

 XVII, 492, 1878. 



