660 



KAHSOK KASHTU 



[b. a. e. 



Earsok. An Eskimo village in w. Green- 

 land, lat. 72° 40^ 



Karsck.— Science, xi, 259, 1888. Karsuk.— Kane, 

 Arct. Explor., l, 45S, 1856. 



Karsuit. A village of Ita Eskimo on 

 Inglelield gulf, n. Greenland. 

 Karsioot.— Kane, Arct. Explor., ll, 212, 1856. 

 Karsooir.— Hayes, Arct. Boat. Journ., 307, 18C0. 



Karsukan. A spring settlement of Oko- 

 miut Eskimo of Sauniia, ofi the coast of 

 Baffin land, N. of Cmnberland sd. — Boas 

 in 6th Rep. B. A. E., map, 1888. 



Karusuit (' the caves' ). A village of 

 the Talirpingmiut Okomiut Eskimo on 

 Nettilling fjord, w. shore of Cumberland 

 sd.; po|). 29 in 1883. 



Kaiossuit. — Boas in Deutsche Geog. Bliitt., vni, 

 32, 1885. K'arussu t. — Boa.s in Petermanns Mitt., 

 no. 80, 70, 18.S5. Kemasuit. — Kumlien in Bull. 

 Nat. Mus., no. 15, 1.5, 1879. Kemesuit.— Ibid. 

 Kimmocksowick. — Wareham in Jour. Roy. Geog. 

 Soc, xii, 24. 1842. Qarussuit.— Boas in 6th Rep. 

 B. A. E., 426, 1888. 



Karusuk. An Eskimo settlement near 

 Ameralik fjord, lat. 64° 20', av. Green- 

 land. — Nansen, First Crossing of Green- 

 land, 11,416,1890. 



Kasaan (pronounced by Haida GAsa'n, 

 but said to be from Tlingit Kd^st-dn, 

 ' pretty town ' ). One of the three towns 

 in Alaska still occupied by the Haida; 

 situated on Skowl arm of Kasaan bay, 

 E. coast of Prince of Wales id. Chat- 

 chee-nie, the name of a Kaigani town 

 in John Work's list of 1836-41, was 

 either a camping place of the people of 

 Kasaan or a town occupied bj' them 

 before moving to the latter place. In 

 Work's time it had 18 houses and 249 

 people. Petroff gives the population of 

 Kasaan (and "Skowl") in 1880 aa 173, 

 and the Census of 1890 as 46; the present 

 number is insignificant. The family that 

 settled here wastheTadjilanas. (.i. r. s. ) 

 GAsa'n.— Swanton, Cont. Haida, 282, 1905. Ka- 

 saan. — U. S. Coast Surv. map of Alaska, south- 

 east sec, Apr. 1898. Eassan. — Petroff in 10th Cen- 

 sus, Alaska, 32, 1884. Kassan Haade. — Harrison 

 in Proc. and Trans. Roy. Soc. Can., sec. ii, 125, 

 1895. 



Kasaktikat {Ka-sal:-tV-l;at). A former 

 Chumashan village at a place called Ba- 

 jada de la Canada, in Ventura co., Cal. — 

 Henshaw, Buenaventura MS. vocab., B. 

 A. E., 1884. 



Kasenos {Ka/-!^e-nos). A village, prob- 

 ably of the Cathlacumup, formerly sit- 

 uated where Scappoose cr. empties into 

 Willamette slough, Greg.— Gibbs, MS. 

 248, B. A. E. 



Kashahara. The Karok name of the 

 Wintun of Trinity r., n. Cal. (Kroeber, 

 inf'n, 1903). The Trinity r. Wintun 

 consisted of the Normuk, Tientien, and 

 Waikenmuk. 



Kashaiak. A Togiagamiut Eskimo vil- 

 lage on Togiak r. , near its junction with 

 the Kashaiak, Alaska; pop. 181 in 1880. 

 Kashaiak. — Baker. Geog. Diet. Alaska, 1902. Kash- 

 aiyak. — Simir^and Post quoted bv Baker, ibid. 

 Kissaiakh.— Petroff in 10th Census, Alaska, 17, 1884. 

 Kissiak.— Petroff, I? ep. on Alaska. 49, i880. Kissi- 

 akh.— Nelson in 18th Rep B. A. E., map, 1900. 



Kashiga. An Aleut village on Unalaska 

 id., Alaska. Pop. 41 in 1833 (at which 

 date it was the headquarters of the fore- 

 man of the Russian-American Co. for the 

 w. half of Unalaska), accordirg to Veni- 

 aminoff ; 74 in 1874, according to Shiesne- 

 kov; 73 in 1880; 46 in 1890. 

 Kashega, — Sarichef (1792) quoted by Baker, Geog. 

 Diet. Alaska, 1902. Kashiga. — 11th Census, Alaska, 

 89,1898. Kashigin. — Ibid. Koschiginskoje. — Holm- 

 berg, Ethnog. Skizz., map, 142, 1855. Koshegen- 

 skoi.— Elliott, Cond. Aff. Alaska, 225, 1875. Kosh- 

 igin.— Petroff, Rep. on Alaska, 20, 1880. Koshi- 

 ginskoe. — Veniaminoff, Zapiski, ii, 202, 1840. 



Kashigalak. A Kaialigmiut Eskimo vil- 

 lage in the middle of Nelson id., Alaska; 

 pop. 10 in 1880. 



Kashigalagamute. — Petroff, Rep. on Alaska, 54, 

 1881. Kashigalogamut. — Nelson (1878) quoted by 

 Baker, Geog. Diet. Alaska, 1902. Kashigalogumut. — 

 Nelson in 18th Rep. B. A. E., map, 1900. Kashi- 

 galuk. — Baker, op. cit. 



Kashiwe [Kas-hV-we). A former Chuma- 

 shan village near Newhall, Ventura eo., 

 Cal., at a place now called Cuesta Santa 

 Susiina. — Henshaw, Buenaventura MS. 

 vocab., B. A. P:., 1884. 



Kashkachuti (Koiili-kach^ -u-{i) . A pueblo 

 of the Acoma which, according to tradi- 

 tion, was inhabited in prehistoric times 

 during the migration of the tribe from the 

 mythic Shipapu in the indefinite n. — 

 Hodge in Century Mag., lvi, 15, May,1898. 



Kashkekoan ( 'people of [the r.] Kashk' ). 

 A Tlingit division at Yakutat, Alaska, that 

 is said to have migrated from the Atha- 

 pascan country on the upper part of Cop- 

 per r. It belongs to the Raven phratry. 



Kackle qoan.— Swanton, field notes, B. A. E., 1904. 

 Kaschke-kon.— Krause, Tlinkit Ind., 116, 1885. 



Kashong. A former Seneca settlement 

 on Kashong cr., at its entrance into Sen- 

 eca lake. It is first mentioned in 1765, 

 and contained 14 houses when destroyed 

 by Sullivan in Sept., 1779. (.i. m.) 



Cashaem. — MS. Jour, of 1787 quoted by Conover, 

 Kanadasegaand Geneva MS., B. A. E. Cashong. — 

 Ibid. Gagh sieanhgwe. — Ibid. Gaghsiungua. — 

 Ibid. Gaghsrnghgwa. — Ibid. Gaghsonshwa. — 

 Kirkland (1765) quoted by Conover, ibid. Gag- 

 songhwa. — Ibid. Gahasieanhgwe. — Ibid. Garhaw- 

 quash. — Morgan, League Iroq., map, 1851. Gath- 

 siungua. — .Tour, of 1687 quoted by Conover, MS., 

 B. A. E. Gothescunqueon. — Ibid. Gothsenquean. — 

 Ibid. Gothseunquean. — Ibid. Go'hsinquea. — Ibid. 

 Kashanquash. — Ibid. Kashong. — Ibid. Kashon- 

 quash. — Ibid. Kershong. — Ibid. Kushang. — Ibid. 

 Shenawaga. — Ibid. 



Kash's Village. A summer camp of a 

 Stikine chief on Etolin id., Alaska; 40 

 jjcople were there in 1880. — Petroff in 

 10th Census, Alaska, 32, 1884. 



Kashtata {K^ac-ta'-ta). A former Ta- 

 kelma village on the s. side of Rogue r., 

 above Leaf cr. and Galice cr., Greg. — Dor- 

 sey in Jour. Am. Folk-lore, iii, 235, 1890. 



Kashtok {Knr-t'6'l:). A former Chuma- 

 shan village in the interior of Ventura co., 

 Cal. — Henshaw, Buenaventura MS. vo- 

 cab., B. A. E., 1884. 



Kashtu ( Kac-tu). A former Chumashan 

 village on the Piru, a tributary of Santa 

 Clara r., Ventura co., Cal. — Henshaw, 

 Buenaventura MS. vocab., B. A. E., 1884. 



