610 



INIGSALIK INSHTASANDA 



[b. a. e. 



Anaica Apalache. — Gentleman of Elvas in Hak- 

 luyt Soc. Pub., IX, 43, 1.S51. Anhayca.— Gallatin 

 in" Trans. Am. Antiq. Soc, Ii, 102, 1836. Aniaca 

 Apalache.— Shipp, De Soto and Florida, 684, 1881 

 (misprint). Iniahico.— Biedma (1544) in Ternaux- 

 Compans, Voy., xx, 57, 1841. 



Inigsalik. A southern settlement of the 

 AngmagsaUngmiut Eskimo of e. Green- 

 land, where they find soft stone of which 

 they fashion pots and lamps. — jNIeddelel- 

 ser om Grunland, x, 368, 1888. 



Inigsuarsak. An Eskimo village in 

 lat. 72° 45^, w. Greenland. — Science, xi, 

 map, 259, 1888. 



Inisiguanin. Mentioned as one of the 

 towns or provinces apparently on or in 

 the vicinity of the South Carolina coast, 

 visited by Ayllon in 1520. 

 Inisiguanin. — oViedo, Hist. Gen. Indias, in, 628, 

 1853. Yncignavin. — Barcia, Ensay(>, 5, 1723. 



Initkilly. A Tikeramiut Eskimo village 

 near the coal veins e. of C. Lisburne, 

 Alaska.— Coast Surv. map, 1890. 



Inkalich. The Eskimo name of a divi- 

 sion of the Kaiyuhkhotanaon Innoko r., 

 Alaska. Paltchikatno and Tigshelde were 

 probably two of the villages. 



Inchulukhlaites. — Latham, Essays, 271, 1860. Inka- 

 lichljiiaten. — Holmberg quoted by Dall in Cont. 

 N. A. I{;thnol., I, 25, 1877. . Inkuliichliiaten. — Wran- 

 gell quoted by Baer and Helmersen, Beitrage, I, 

 118, 1839. Inkulukhlaites.— Latham, op. cit., 267. 

 Inkuluklaities.— Ibid., 272. 



Inkesabe ( 'black shoulder' ) . An Omaha 

 gens of the Hangashenu division, the 

 custodian of the tribal pipes. The sub- 

 gentes are lekidhe, Nonhdeitazhi, Wad- 



,higizhe, and Watanzizhidedhatazhi. 



'Black.— Morgan, Anc. Soc, 155, 1877. Enk-ka-sa- 

 ba.— Long, Exped. Rocky Mis., i, 326, 1823. Ink- 

 ka'-sa-ba.— Morgan, Anc. Soc, 1.55, 1877. Inke- 

 sabe,— Dorsey in 3d Rep. B. A. E., 219, 1885. 



Inkillis Tamaha ( ' English town ' ) . One 

 of the former so-called Choctaw Sixtowns 

 in the n. w. part of Jasper co.. Miss. It 

 gave its name to a considerable tract in 

 that part of the county and extending 

 into Newton co. It is said to have re- 

 ceived this name from the fact that the 

 English made a distribution of property 

 there in early times. — Halbert in Ala. 

 Hist. Soc, Misc. Coll., i, 382, 1901. 

 Killis-tamaha.— Gatsohet, Creek Migr. Leg., i, 109, 

 1884. 



lukpa. A band of the Wahpeton Sioux, 

 living in 1886 at Big Stone lake, Minn., 

 and probably at Cormorant pt., Mille 

 Lacs, in 1862. 



Big Stone Lake band.— Ind. Aff. Rep., 102, 1859. 

 Inkpatonwan. — Ashley, letter to Dorsey, Jan. 1886. 

 Inpaton. — Ibid. 



Innoka. A Kaiyuhkhotana village on 

 Tlegon r., Alaska. — Petroff, Rep. on 

 Alaska, 37, 1884. 



Inojey. A former Chumashan village 

 near Santa Barbara, Cal. — Taylor in Cal. 

 Farmer, Apr. 24, 1863. 



Inomassi. A former Dieguenorancheria 

 belonging to San Miguel de la Frontera 

 mission, w. coast of Lower California, 

 about lat. 32° 10^— Taylor in Cal. Farmer, 

 May 18, 1860. 



Inoschuochn ( ' bear berry ' ) . An Apache 



Grave Creek Tablet 

 length 1 3-4 in. 



clan or l)and at San Carlos agency and Ft 

 Apache, Ariz., in 1881. 



Inoschujochen, — Bourke in Jour. Am. Folk-lore, 

 III, 112, 1890. 



Inotuks. Given as a Karok village on 

 Klamath r., Cal.; inhabited in 1860. 

 E-no-tucks.— Taylor in Cal. Farmer, Mar. 23, 1860. 

 Insanity. See Health and D'ii>ease. 

 Inscribed tablets. Objects, generally of 

 soft stone, usually shale or sandstone, con- 

 taining various lines and formal characters 

 incised or in relief. Some of them are 

 undoubtedly preliistoric and susceptible 

 of interpretation in the light of aboriginal 

 ornamentation and syml)olism; others are 

 forgeries. While it would perha]")S be too 

 much to say that there exists n. of Mex- 

 ico no tablet or other ancient article that 

 contains other than a pictorial or picto- 

 graphic record, it is safe to assert that no 

 authentic specimen has yet been brought 

 to public notice. Any object claimed to 

 be of pre-Columbian age 

 and showing hieroglyphic 

 or other characters that 

 denote a degree of culture 

 higher than that of the 

 known tribes, is to be 

 viewed with suspicion and 

 all the circumstances con- 

 nected with its discovery subjected to 

 rigid scrutiny. The same remarks apply 

 to engraved copper plates. In the latter 

 material, the uneven surface produced by 

 natural corrosion is often mistaken for 

 attempts at inscriptions. See Grave Creek 

 mound, Pictography. 



Consult Farquharson in Proc. Daven- 

 port Acad. Sci., ii, 1877-80; Fowke, 

 Archfeol. Hist. Ohio, 1902; McLean, 

 Mound Builders, 1879; Mallory in 10th 

 Rep. B. A. E.,1893; Mercer, The Lenape 

 Stone, 1885; Moorehead, Prehist. Impls., 

 1900; Schoolcraft, Ind. Tribes, i-iv, 1851- 

 57; Squier and Davis, Ancient Monu- 

 ments, 1848; Thomas in 12th Rep. B. A. E., 

 632, 1894. (g. F.) 



Inscription Rock. See El Morro. 

 Inselnostlinde. A Kaiyuhkhotana vil- 

 lage of the Jngelnute division on Shage- 

 luk r., Alaska. — Zagoskin, Descr. Russ. 

 Poss. Am., map, 1842. 



Inshtasanda {rnshta, 'eye' or 'eyes'; 

 sanda, an archaic and untranslatable 

 term. — Fletcher). One of the 2 divisions 

 of the Omaha, containing the Mandhin- 

 kagaghe, Tesinde, Tapa, Ingdhezhide, 

 and Inshtasanda gentes. 

 Grey Eyes.— Jackson (1877) quoted by Donaldson 

 in Smithson. Rep. 1885, pt. 2. 74, 1886. Ictasanda. — 

 Dorsey in 3d Rep. B. A. E., 219, 1885. Inshtasanda.— 

 A. C. Fletcher, inf n, 190(1. Ish-ta-sun'-da.— Long, 

 Exped. Rocky Mts., i, 325, 1823. Istasunda.— Jack- 

 son (1877), op. cit., 74. 



Inshtasanda. An Omaha gens, belong- 

 ing to the Inshtasanda division. The sub- 

 divisions are Ninibatan, Real Inshtasan- 

 da, Washetan, and Real Thunder people. 

 Ictasanda.— Dorsey in 3d Rep. B. A. E., 220, 1885. 

 Inshtasanda.— A. C. Fletcher, inf'n, 1906. Ish- 



