BOLL. 30] 



KAHLCHATLAN — KAIBAB 



641 



sion formerly living at Kake, Alaska. It 

 was of the Raven phratry. (j. k. s. ) 



Kahlchatlan {Qd'tlcaL.'dti). A town oc- 

 cupied by the Stikine before moving to 

 the present site of Wrangell, Ala-^ka, and 

 consequently called Old Wrangell by the 

 whites. (.1. R. s. ) 



Kahlguihlgahet-gitinai ( QaJ(]uV-i(;d'xet 

 gtlhm^-i, 'the Pebble-town (iiti'ns living 

 on the side of the town up the inlet'). 

 A small branch of a Haida family called 

 Hlgahet-gitinai living on the w. coast of 

 Queen Charlotte ids., Brit. Col. — Swan- 

 ton, Cont. Haida, 284, 1905. 



Kahligua-haidagai ( Qd'tujnaxd'-klAga-i, 

 'people living at the end of the town up 

 the inlet'). A subdivision of thelStawas- 

 haidagai, a family of the Ea^le clan of 

 the Haida in Brit. Col., so named from 

 the position of their houses in the town. — 

 Swanton, Cont. Haida, 273, 1905. 



Kahmetahwungaguma ('lake of the 

 sandy waters.' — Warren). The Chippewa 

 name of Sandy lake, on the upper Missis- 

 sippi r., in Cass CO., Mi mi. The Chippewa 

 built a village on this lake ab:)Ut 1730, 

 which was their first settlement on the 

 headwaters (if the Mississippi. The band 

 residing here was commonly known as 

 the Sandy Lake band. Some of them 

 removed about 1807 to Pembina r. at the 

 persuasion of the Northwest Fur Com- 

 pany, (j. M.) 

 Chipp'eways of Sand Lake. — Lewis and Clark, Trav- 

 els, '2S, 1>0(). Kah-me-tah-wung-a-guma. — Warren 

 (1852) Jii Minn. Hist. Soc. Coll.. v, 177, 1885. 

 Kami'tawgingagamag. — \Vm. .Foiies, inf'n, 19. 6 (cor- 

 rect form ). Sandy Lake Indians. — Morse, Kep. to 

 Sec. War, 33, 1S22. 



Kahmitaiks ('buffalo dung'). A di- 

 vision of the Piegan tribe of the Siksika. 

 Buffalo Bung. — Grintiell, Blackfoot Lodge Tales, 

 225, 1892. Kah'-mi-taiks.— Ibid.. 209. 



Kahmiut. A Kuskwogmiut Eskiino 

 village in the Kuskokwim district, Alaska; 

 pop. 40 in 1890.— 11th Census, Alaska, 164, 

 1893. 



Kahra ('wild rice'). One of the two 

 modern divisions of the Sisseton Sioux. 

 They had no permanent residence, but 

 frequently visited L. Traverse, Minn., 

 their hunting grounds being on Red r. 

 of the North. -Long (Exped. St Peters 

 R., I, 378, 1824) said that they dwelt in 

 fine skin tipis, the skins being well i)re- 

 pared and handsomely painted. 

 Caree,— Drake, Book Inds., vi. 1848 (identical?). 

 Carees. — Domenech, Deserts of N. Am., 1,410, 18ii0 

 (identical?). Carrees.— Pike, Trav., 127, 1811. 

 Cawras.— Mcintosh, Origin of N. Am. Inds., 202, 

 1853. Caw-ree.—Lewisand Clark, Di«cov., 34, 1«C6. 

 Lao Traverse band.— Ind. AfF. Rep. 18.59. 102, 1860. 

 North Susseeton.— Ind. Aff. Rep., 497, 1839. Sussi- 

 tongs of Roche Blanche.— Pike, Trav., 127, 1811. 

 Tipper Seesetoans. — Siblev (18.52) in Sen. Ex. Doc. 

 29, pt. 2, 32d Cong.. 2d sess., 9, 18.53. 



Kahtai. A former Clallam village at 

 Port Townsend, Wash., in territory for- 

 merlv occupied by the Chemakum. 

 Kihti— Gihbs in Pac. R. R. Rep., I. 429, 1855. 

 Ka-tai.— Gibbs, Clallam and Lummi, 20. 1863. 



Kai ('willows'). A Navaho clan. Cf, 

 Knilailin. 



Kai->!ine —Matthews in Jour. Am. Folk-^ore, in, 

 103, 1890 ( = • people of the willows' )■ Kaic/ine'. — 

 Matthews, Navaho Legends, 30, lh97. 



Kaiachim. A former Poino village in 

 Russ'an r. valley, Sonoma co., Cal. 

 Kajatschim.— \\ langell. Kthnog. Nachr., 80, 1839. 



Kaiahl-lanas {Qd'-iat la'nus, 'peoj)le of 

 sea-lion town'). A family of the Eagle 

 clan of the Haida, so called from the town 

 which they formerly occupied on Skots- 

 gai bav, near Skidegate, Queen Charlotte 

 ids., Brit. Col. After dirticulties with 

 their neighbors they moved to the w. 

 coast, where they built the town of Kai- 

 sun. The renuiant is now at Skidegate. 

 They claimed community of origin with 

 the Kona-kei;awai, Djiguaahl-lanas, and 

 Stawas-haidauai. (.i. r. s. ) 



Kai'atl la'nas.— Boas in l_2th Rep. N. W. Tribes 

 Can.. 21. IS 8. fta' iat la'nas. — Swanton, Cont. 

 Haida, -.7:, 1905. Qa'-ita la'nas.— Ibid. 



Kaiak, kayak. The men's boat of the 

 Eskinioof .^j.e. Nortli America, from qcijaq 

 (7=German rh), the name in the eastern 

 dialects of the Eskimo language. See 

 Boats. (.\. F. c.) 



Eaiakak. A village of the Ingalik divi- 

 sion of the Kaiyuhkhotana, with 134 na- 

 tives in 1880, on the w. bank of Yukon 

 r., Alaska. — Petroff in 10th Census, 

 Alaska, 12, 1884. 



Kaiaksekawik ('place for making kai- 

 aks' ). A Utukamiut village on the N. side 

 of Icy cape, Alaska. 



Kiiaksi'kawik. — Kleventh Census, Alaska, 162, 

 1893. Kayakshigvikg.— Zagoskin, Descr. Russ. 

 Po<s. in Am., pt. 1, 74, 1847. 



Kaialigraiut. An Eskimo tribe N. of the 

 Kuskwogtniut, exteniling on the main- 

 land from Kuguktik r. to C. Romanzof, 

 Alaska. In the lakes and streams of the 

 tunilra they obiain an abundant supply 

 of iresh fish at the season when the coast 

 natives often hunger. They ?r-^ therefore 

 a more vigorous people, livingstillin prim- 

 itive .simplicity. Their villages are Agi- 

 ukchuk, Askinuk, Chininak, Kaialik, Ka- 

 liukluk, Kashijralak, Kushunuk, Kvigat- 

 luk, Nuloktolnk, Nunvogulukhluguk, 

 Sfagatnik, Ukak, Ckuk, and Unakagak. 

 Kaia.igamut. — Nelson in 18th Rep. B. A. E., map, 

 1899. Kai-a-lig-mut.— Dall in Proc. Am. A. A. S., 

 XXXTV, 18, 188e. 



Kaialik. A Kaialigmint Eskimo village 

 in the Yukon delta near Azun r., Alaska; 

 pop. ICO in 1880, 157 in 1890. 

 Kaialigumiut.— Xelson (18C8) quoted by Baker, 

 Geog. Diet Alaska. 1902. Kailwigamiut.— Eleventh 

 Cen'ius. Alaska, 161, 1893. Kialigamiut.— Ibid , 110. 



Kaibab ( prob. '(m the niomitain,' from 

 koib or kfnba, ' mountain.' and the locative 

 ending ah or ha. — Kr<>eber). A division 

 cf the Paiute, nmnbering 171 in 1873, 

 when thev were in the vi(;inity of Kanab, 

 8. w. Itah. Powell gave their name to 

 the Kail ab plateau, n. w. Ariz. Jn 1903 

 their number was given as 140, of wh'rh 

 30 were at Cedar City, Utah, and 110 



Bull. 30—05- 



-41 



