BULL. 30] 



KATO KAULDAW 



665 



lage on the s. e. coast of Alaska penin. ; 

 pop. 218 in 1880, 132 in 1890.— Petroff in 

 10th Cen.'us, Alaska, 28, 1884. 



Kato. A Kuneste tribe or band for- 

 merly living in Cahto and Long valleys, 

 Mendocino co., Cal. These were prob- 

 ably the people mentioned by McKee as 

 occupying the second large valley of Eel 

 r., numbering about 500 in 1851, and dif- 

 fering in language from the Pomo, a fact 

 which has long been lost sight of. 

 Powers divides them into Kai Pomo, 

 Kastel Pomo, and Kato Pomo, and gives 

 a Kulanapan vocabulary. They have 

 recently been found to belong to the 

 Athapascan stock, and closely related to 

 the Wailaki, although they resemble the 

 Pomo in culture. (p. e. g. ) 



Battmdaikai.— Latham in Trans. Philol. Soc. 

 Lond.,77,18o6. Batem-da-kai-ee. — Gibbs in School- 

 craft, Ind. Tribes, in, 434, 1853. B .-tem-da-kaii. — 

 Powell in Cont. N. A. Ethnol., ni, 491, 1877. 

 Batin-da-kia.— Ind. Aff. Rop.. 210, 1851. Cabadi- 

 lapo.— McKee (1851) in Sen. Ex. Doc. 4, 32d Cong., 

 spec, sess., 148, 1853. Cahto Pomo. — Powers in Over- 

 land Mo., IX, 500, 1872. Kai Po-mo.— Powers in 

 Cont. N. A. Ethnol.,111, 148. 1877. Ka-to-Po-mo.— 

 Ibid., 1,50. Ki-Pomas.— Ind. Aff. Rep. 1804, 119, 

 18ti5. Laleshiknom.— .\. L. Kroeber, iiit'n, 1903 

 (Yuki name). Tlokeang.— Kroeber, Coast Yuki 

 MS., Univ. Cal. (own name). 



Katomemetunne ( ' people by the deep 

 water' ). A former village of the Mish- 

 ikhwutmetunne on Coquille r., Oreg. 

 Ka'-,o-me'-me lun'ne. — Dorsey in Jour. Am. Folk- 

 lore, III, 232, 1890. 



Katsalgi (kdtsa 'panther', algi 'peo- 

 ple ' ). A Creek clan. 



Kat'-chu.— Morgan, Anc. Soc, 161,1877 ('Tiger'). 

 Katsalgi. — Gatschet, Creek Migr. Leg., i, 165, 

 1884. 



Katsey. A Cowichan tribe occupying 

 the villages of Seltsas and Shuwalethet, 

 on Pitt lake and river emptying into the 

 lower Fraser, Brit. Col.; pop. 79 in 1904. 

 Kaitze. — Brit. Adra. Cliart, no. 1917. Katezie. — 

 Can. Ind. Aff. for 1878. 79. Katsey.— Can. Ind. 

 Rep. 1901, pt. 2, 158. K'e'etse.— Boas in Rep. 

 64th Meeting Brit. A. A. S., 454, 1S94. Ke'tsi.— 

 Hill-Tout in Ethnol. Snrv. Can., 54, 1902. 



Katshikotin. A part of the Hankutchin 

 living on Yukon r., a short distance be- 

 low Fortymile cr., near the Yukon-Alaska 

 boundary. 



Ka-tshik-otin. — Dawson in Rep. Geol. Surv. Can. 

 for 1888, 202b, 1889. Kl t-ol-klin.— Seliwatka, 

 Rep. on Alaska, 86, 1885 (name given by Russian 

 half-breeds). 



Katstayot {Kat-sta'-iiot). A former 

 Chumashan village between Pt Concep- 

 tion and Santa Barbara, Cal., at a locality 

 now called Santa Anita. — Henshaw, Bue- 

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



Kattak. A former Kania'j;miut village 

 on Afognak id., e. of Afognak, Alaska. 

 Katak.— Baker, Geog. Diet. Alaska, 1902. Kattag- 

 miut. — Russ.-Atn. map (1849) qunted by Baker, 

 ibid. Kattagmjut. — Holmberg, Ethnog. Skizz., 

 map, 1855. 



Katzik. Two Indian settlements on the 

 s. bank of lower Fraser r., l)elow Sumass 

 lake, Brit. Col. (Brit. Col. map, Ind. 

 Aff., Victoria, 1872). Perhaps the name 

 refers to the Katsey tribe. 



Katzimo (Ka-tzV-mo). The Keresan 

 name of a precipitous mesa rising 430 ft 



above the basin of Acoma, and about 3 

 m. N. E. of the latter pueblo, in Valencia 

 co.,N. Mex. According to tradition its 

 summit was the site of one of several pre- 

 historic villages which the Acoma people 

 successively occupied during their south- 

 westerly movement from the mythic Shi- 

 papu in the indefinite N. The tradition 

 relates that during a storm a part of the 

 rock fell and some of the inhabitants, 

 cut off from the valley beneath, perished. 

 The site was henceforth abandoned, the 

 survivors moving to another mesa on the 

 summit of which they erected the pres- 

 ent Acoma pueblo (q. V. ). Katzimo mesa 

 is inaccessible by ordinary means, but it 

 was scaled in 1897 by a party representing 

 the Bureau of American Ethnology and 

 evidences of its former occupancy ob- 

 served, thus verifying the native tradi- 

 tion. See Bandelier in Century Cyclop, 

 of Names, 1894; Hodge (1) in Century 

 Mag., Lvi, 15, May, 1898, (2) in Am. An- 

 throp., Sept. 1897, and the references 

 noted below. (p. w. h.) 



1 nchanted Mesa. — Lummis, New Mexico David, 

 39, 1891. Katzim-a. — Bandelier in Arch. Inst. 

 Pap., IV, 314, 1892. Mesa Encantada.— Pullen in 

 Harper's Weekly, 594, Aug. 2, 1890. Rock of Kat- 

 zimo. — Lummis, op. cit., 40. 



Kau. The Corn clan of the Patki 

 (Water House) phratry of the Hopi. 

 Ka-ah, — Bourke, Snake Dance, 117, 1884. Ka'i-e. — 

 Stf-phen in 8th Rep. B. A. E., 39, 1891. Kaii win- 

 wii.— Fewkes iu 19th Rep. B. A. E., 583, 1901 (wm- 

 w'M = 'clan'). Ka'-ii wiin-wu. — Fewkea in Am. 

 Anthrop,, vii, 402, 1894. 



Kaudjnkdjuak {Qaudjuqdjuaq), A win- 

 ter settlement of the Akudnirmiut Es- 

 kimo ])etween Frobisher bay and Cum- 

 berland sd., Baffin land. — Boas in 6th 

 Rep. B. A. E., map, 1888. 



Kaughii. A former Chumashan village 

 at LaCafiada del Corral, about 22 m. from 

 Santa Barbara, Cal. 



Ka-h'6'. — Henshaw, Buenaventura MS. vocab., 

 B. A. E., 18S4. Kaughii.— Father Timeno (1856) 

 quoted by Taylor in Cal. Farmer, May 4, 1860. 



Kauhuk ('high place'). A former 

 Alsea village on the s. side of Alsea r., 

 Oreg. ; noted by Lewis and Clark as con- 

 taining 400 inhabitants in 1806, and as 

 existing on the coast. 



Kahuncle.— Lewis and Clark, Exped., ii, 473, 1814. 

 Kahunkle.— Ibid., ll, 188, 1814. Ka-hun-kle's.— 

 Orig. JiKir. Lewis and Clark, vi, li7, 1905. Kau'- 

 huk. — Dorsey in Jour. Am. Folk-lore, iii, 230, 1890. 



Kaukhwan. A former Alsea village on 

 the N. side of Alsea r., Oreg., at Beaver cr. 

 Kau'-qwan. — Dorsey in Jour. Am. Folk-lore, iii, 

 230, 1890. 



Kauldaw. The Kitksan division and 

 town lying farthest inland toward the 

 headwaters of Skeena r., under the Ba- 

 bine and Skeena River agency, Brit. Col. ; 

 pop. 37 in 1904. 



Culdoah.— Horetzky, Canada on -Pac, 212, 1874. 

 Gal-doe.— Can. Ind. .\ff. Rep., 431, 1896. GalDoe.— 

 Ibid., 252, 1891. Gol-doe.— Ibid., 280, 1894. Kal- 

 doe. — Ibid., 415, 1898. Kaul-daw. — Dorsev in Am. 

 Antiq., XIX, 278, 1897. Kuldo.— Brit. Col. map, 

 1872._ Kuld"e.— Can. Ind. Aff., pt. ii, 160, 1901. 

 Kuldos.— Tolmie and Dawson, Vocabs. Brit. Col., 

 114B, 1SS4. 



