666 



KAUMAUANGMIUT KAWAIKA 



[B. A. E. 



Kaumauangmiut ( from the lake of the 

 same name, around which they chiefly 

 dwell). An Eskimo tribe in s. e. Baffin 

 land, probably closely related to the 

 Nugumiut. 



Karmowong. — Hall, Arctic Researche?, 291, 1S65. 

 Kaumanang.— Boas in IH'iitsclic (ieog. Bltitt., Vlll, 

 32, 1885 (misprint). K'aumauangmiut.— Boas in 

 Peternianns Mitt., no. SU, 7U, 1S85. Q,uauniauang- 

 miut.— Boas i i 0th Rep. B. A. E., 4 1, 1888. 



Kaunaumeek. A former Stockbriilge vil- 

 lage in Rens8elaerco.(?), N.Y.,abouthalf- 

 way between Albany and Stockbridge, 

 Mass., to which latter place the inhabit- 

 ants removed in 1744. — Brainerd (ca. 

 1745) quoted by Ruttenber, Tribes Hud- 

 son R., 198, 1872. 



Kautas. A Koyukukhotana village on 

 Koyukuk r., Alaska, with 10 inhabitants 

 in 1885. 

 Cawtaskakat, — Allen, Rep. on Alaska, 111. 1887. 



Kauten {Kaw'ien). A Squawmish vil- 

 lage connnunity on the right bank of 

 Squawmisht r., Brit. Col. — Hill-Tout in 

 Rep. Brit. A. A. S., 474, 1900. 



Kauweh. An unidentified village on 

 Klamath r., Cal., below its junction with 

 the Trinity, and therefore in Yurok ter- 

 ritory. — McKee (1851) in Schoolcraft, 

 Ind. Tribes, iii, 138, 1853. 



Kaveazruk. A Kaviagmiut village at 

 Port Clarence, Alaska. — Eleventh Census, 

 Alaska, 162, 1893. 



Kaviagmiut. An Eskimo tribe occupy- 

 ing the s. part of Kaviak penin., Alaska, 

 from Norton bay w. Many- winter on the 

 E. shore of Norton sd. Dall includes the 

 Kinugumiut, whose lawless life and enter- 

 prise have been copied by the Kaviagmiut 

 remaining in their old home. This was 

 once a populous country, l)ut the extermi- 

 nation of the arctic hare and the marmot, 

 the disappearance of the reindeer, and the 

 raids of the Kinugumiut have depopu- 

 lated the peninsula and caused the inhab- 

 itants to migrate to other parts of arctic 

 Alaska and become merged in other 

 tribes. Local subdivisions of the exist- 

 ing Kaviagmiut, who numbered 427 in 

 1890, are as follows: Aziagmiut, of Sledge 

 id.; Kaviazagmiut, at the head of l^ort 

 Clarence; Kniktagemiut, of Golofnin 

 bay, and Ukivogmiut, of King id. Their 

 villages are Aiacheruk, AkfKdiut, Anelo, 

 Anlik, Atnuk, Ayak, Aziak, Chaik, Chain- 

 ruk, Chinik, Chiukak, Iknetuk, Iniokte- 

 gokshuk, Kachegaret, Kalulek, Kaveaz- 

 ruk, Kaviak, Kogluk, Kovogzruk, 

 Metukatoak, Netsekavvik, Niktak, Okino- 

 yoktokawik, Opiktulik, Perebluk, Seni- 

 kave, Shinnapago, Siningmon, Sinuk, 

 Sitnazuak, Sunvalluk, Takchuk, Tubuk- 

 tulik, Uinuk, Ukivak, Ukodliut, and 

 Ukviktulik. 



Anligmuts. — Holmbergquoted by Dall, Alaska, 408, 

 1870. Anlygmiiten. — VViangell, EthnoR. Nach.,122, 

 1839. Kavea. — Kelly, A ret. Eskimo, 9, 1890. 

 Kaveaks. — Whympcr, Trav. in Alaska, 143, 1868. 

 Kaverong Mutes. —Kellv, Arot. Eskimo, chart, 1890. 

 Faviacks.— Raymond in Ind. Aff. Rep. 1869, 591, 



1870. Kaviagmut —Nelson in 18th Rep. B. A.E., 

 map. 1899. Kaviagmuts.— Dall, Alaska, 408, 1870. 

 Kaviagmyut. — Turner in 11th Rep. B. A. E., 178, 

 1894. Kaviaks.— Dall in Proc. Cal. Acad. Sci., IV, 

 35, 1SC9. 



Kaviak, A Kaviagmiut village s. e. of 

 Port Clarence, Ala.ska; pop. 200in 1880.— 

 Baker, Ceog. Diet. Alaska, 1902. 



Kaviazagmiut. A subdivision of the 

 Kaviagmiut, q. v. 



Kaviagamute. — Petroff, 10th Censu", Alaska, map, 

 l.s,S4. Kaviazagamute. — Ibid, 11. Kaviaza'gemut. — 

 Dall in I'ont. N. A. Ethnol., i, map, l.s87. 



Kavinish. A former Kawia village in 

 Coahuila valley, Riverside co., Cal. 

 Ka-vi-nish.— Barrows, Ethno.-Bot. Coahuillalnd., 

 34,1900. Indian Wells.— Ibid. 



Kawa ( K.'nv'i, 'eel spring ' ). A Modoc 

 campat Yanek-!, on Spraguer.,s. Oreg. 



Kaui.— Gat-chet in Cont. N. A. Etlnu.l., ll, pt. 1, 

 31; pt. 2, 122, 1890. Kawa.— Ibid. 



Ka.wa,ibatnnya,{Ka-2vdi-ba-fu)1-a ) . Given 

 as the Watermelon clan of the Patki 

 (Cloud) phratry|of the Hopi. — Stephen 

 in 8th Rep. B. A. E.,39, 1891. 



Kawaiisu. The most westerly subdivi- 

 sion of the Ute-Chemehuevi linguistic di- 

 vision of the Shoshonean family. They 

 otcupy an isolated area on both sides of 

 the Tehachapi mts., Cal., but particularly 

 the w. side around Paiute mts., and the 

 valleys of Walker basin and Caliente and 

 Kelso crs. as far s. as Tehachapi. 



Cobajais.— Garces (1776), Diary. 489, 1900. Cobaji.— 

 Ibid., 304, 445. Covtyi. — Iveane in Stanford, 

 Cnmpend., 510, 1878. Kah-wis'-sah. — Merriamin 

 Science, XIX, 916, Jun''15, 1904. Kawaiisu. — Kroe- 

 ber, inf'n. 1905 (Voknts name). Ka-wi'-a-suh. — 

 Powers in Cont. N. A. Ethnol., in, 393, 1877 ( Yo- 

 knts name). Kawishm.— Kroeber. inf'n, 1905 (Tu- 

 batul.ibal name). Kow-a'-sah.— Merriam, op. cit. 

 Kubakhye. — Kroeber, inf'n, 1905 (Mohave name). 

 Newoo'-ah. — Merriam , op. cit. ( = ' peof 1 j ' ) . Koches 

 Colteches.— Garces, op. cit., 295, 304 (s> called by 

 Mariposa people). Ta-hi-cha-pa-han-na. — Powers 

 in Cont. N. A. Ethnol., lil, 393, 1877 (division 

 around mtns. of .same name). Ta-hichp'. — Ibid. 

 (so called by Kern r. people). 



Ka'waika. A ruined pueblo, attributed 

 by the Hopi to the Kavvaika people, a 

 name also applied by them to the pueblo 

 of Laguna, N. Mex., and by the Lagunas 

 themselves to designate their village; 

 situated ashort<listance w. of theKeam's 

 Canyon road, on the top of a mesa be- 

 tween two gorges tributary to Jeditoh 

 valley, in the Hopi country, n. e. Ari- 

 zona. The ruin was surveyed and first 

 described by V. Mindeleff in 1885, under 

 the name Mishiptonga, apparently 

 through confusion with Nesheptanga, 

 another ruin near by. The ruin has been 

 largely rifled of its art remains by Navaho 

 diggers and the results mostly lo.'-t to 

 science, but systematic excavation was 

 conducted in the undisturbed portion by 

 the National Museum in 1901. See Min- 

 deleff in 8th Rep. B. A. E., 52, pi. 9, 

 1891; Mooney in Am. Anthrop., July, 

 1893; Fewkes in 17th Rep. B. A. E., 590, 

 622, 1898; Hough in Rep. Nat. Mus. 

 1901, 339, 1903. 



Kawaika, — Mooney, op. cit. Kawaiokuh. — Hough 

 op. cit. Mishiptonga. — Mindeleff, op. cit. 



