678 



KHACHTAIS KHEMNICHAN 



[b. a. b. 



1853. Ha-bi-na-pa. — McKee, op. cit. Ka-bi-na- 

 pek.— Powers in Cont. N. A. Ethnol., in, 20-1, 1877. 



Khachtais. A former Siuslaw village on 

 Siuslaw r., Oreg. 



K'qatc-jais'. — Dorsev in Jour. Am. Folk-lore, in, 

 230, 1890. 



Khahitan ( Gha-luta'n, pi. Gha-hitlVneo, 

 'ermine people', from gha-l 'ermine', 

 Intx/iico 'people' ). TheCheyennenameof 

 an unidentified Pueblo tribe of the Rio 

 Grande, known to the Cheyenne through 

 visits and trade intercourse. They for- 

 merly accompanied Mexican traders in 

 their journeys to the camps of the Plains 

 tribes, and used Spanish as well as their 

 own language. They formerly cut their 

 hair across below the ears, with a short 

 side plait wrapperl with strings of white 

 ermine skin, but have now adopted the 

 ordinary hairdress style of the Plains 

 tribes. From information of Cheyenne 

 who met some of them on a recent visit 

 to Taos, N. Mex., it is known that they 

 are distinct from Ute, Navaho, Jicarilla, 

 or Taos Indians, and live farther s. than 

 any of these. They may possibly be the 

 Picuris. (,T. M. ) 



Gha-hi-taneo.— Moonev, MS. Cheyenne notes, B. 

 A. E., 1906. Ka-he'-ta-ni-o.— Havden, Ethnog. 

 and Philol. Mo. Val., 290, 1862. 



Khaik. A Chnagmiut Eskimo village 

 on the Yukon, Alaska. 



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

 1899. Khaigamute. — Petroff in 10th Census, 

 Alaska, map, 1884. 



Khaikuchum. A former Siuslaw village 

 on Siuslaw r., Oreg. 



K'qai'-ku-tc'um'. — Dorsev in Jour. Am. Folk-lore, 

 III, 230, 1890. 



Khainanaitetunne, A former village of 

 theTututni, theinhaliitants of which were 

 exterminated, except two boys, one of 

 whom w'as an old man at Siletz agency, 

 Oreg., in 1884. 



fta'-i-na'-na-i-te' ^unne. — Dorsey in Jour. Am. 

 Folk-lore, lii, 236, 1890. 



Khaishuk. A former Yaquina village on 

 the N. side of Yaquina r. , Oreg. 

 Kqai'-cuk. — Dorsev in Jour. Am. Folk-lore, iii, 229, 

 1890. 



Khaiyukkhai. A former Yaquina vil- 

 lage on the s. side of Ya(iuina r., Oreg. 

 Kqai-jii'i'-kqai.— Dorsev in Jour. Am. Folk-lore, 

 III, 229, 1890. 



Khaiyumitu. A former Siuslaw village 

 on Siuslaw r., Oreg. 



K'qai-yu'-mi-iu. — Dorsev in Jour. Am. Folk-lore, 

 III, 230, 18V0. 



Khakaiauwa. Said to be a collective 

 name for the Pomo villages on upper 

 Clear lake, Cal.— Kroeber, MS., Univ. 

 Cal., 1903. Cf. Khana. 



Khakhaich. A former Siuslaw village 

 on Siuslaw r., Oreg. 



Kqa-kqaitc'. — Dorsev in Jour. Am. Folk-lore, in, 

 230, 1890. 



Khalakw. A former Siuslaw village on 

 Siuslaw r., Oreg. 



Qa-lak'w'. — Dorsey in Jour. Am. Folk-lore, in, 

 230, 1890. 



Khaltso ('yellow bodies'). A Navaho 

 clan, the descendants of two daughters of 

 an Apache father. 



7/altso.— Matthews, Navaho Legends, 30, 1897. 

 ifaltso(/ine'. — Ibid. Qalto.— Matthews in Jour. 

 Am. Folklore, in, 103, 1890. Qaltso^ine.— Ibid. 



Khana (Pomo: 'on the water', or 'on 

 [Clear] lake'). A term which seems to 

 have been descriptively ai)plied to the 

 Pomo of Clear lake, Cal. Bartlett (1854) 

 gives a H'hana vocabulary, which is 

 Pomo, as coming from the upper Sacra- 

 mento, but obtained it from a stray Pomo 

 at San Diego. 



H'hana.— Bartlett in Cont. N. A. j:thnol., in, 492, 

 1877. Khana.— S. A. Barrett, inf n, 1906. 



Kharatanumanke. Given as a Mandan 

 gens, but evidently merely a band. 

 Ho-ra-ta'-mu-make. — Morgan, Anc. Soe., I.'i8, 1877. 

 Qa-ra-ta' nu-man'-ke. — Dorsey in l.'ith Rep. B.A. E., 

 241, 1897 (given with a query). Wolf.— Morgan, 

 op. cit. 



Khashhlizhni ('mud'). A Navaho 

 clan. 



/fa.'ili'cf/ine'. — Matthews, Navaho Legends, 30, 

 1897. //asli'rni.— Ibid. Qaclij.— Matthews in Jour. 

 Am. Folk-lore, in, 103, l.s90. Qaclijni.— Ibid. 



Khaskankhatso ( ' much yucca ' ) . A Nav- 

 aho clan. 



i7askan/(atso. — Mattlu'ws, Navaho Legends, 30, 

 1897. y/a^kan/iatso'/ine'.^Ibid. Gacka"qatsb. — 

 Matthews in Jour. Am. Folk-lore, in, 103, 1890. 

 ftacka"qatsbj(:ine. — Ibid. 



Khauweshetawes ('spread-out irriga- 

 tion ditch'). A Maricopa rancheria on 

 the Eio Gila, s. Ariz. — ten Kate, inf'n, 

 1888. 



Khawina ( ' on the water ' ) . The name, 

 in the Upper Clear Lake dialect, of the 

 Lower Clear Lake Pomo village at Sul- 

 phur Bank, Lake co., Cal. — Kroeber, 

 MS., Univ. Cal., 1903. 



Kkdhasiukdhin ('dwelling place among 

 the yellow flowers'; i. e., 'sunflower 

 place '[?]). An ancient Osage village on 

 Neosho r., Kans. 



Qjiiasi uiiiii".— Dorsey, Osage MS. voeab., B. A.E., 

 1883. Qdhasi ukdhi".— Ibid. 



Kheerghia. A former Tututni village 

 on the coast of Oregon, about 25 m. s. of 

 the mouth of Pistol r. 



Miin-kqe'-tiin.— Dorsey in Jour. Am. Folk-lore, in, 

 236, IS'JO. Qe-e-rxi'-a."- Ibid. 



Khemnichan ('mountain-water wood,' 

 from a hill covered with timber that ap- 

 pears to rise out of the water) . A band of 

 the Mdewakanton Sioux. According to 

 Pike they were living in 1811 in a village 

 near the head of L. Pe|>in, Minn., on the 

 site of the present Red Wing, under chief 

 Tatankamani ('Walking Buffalo'); in 

 1820 they lived on L. Pepin, under chief 

 Red Wing. Long, in 1824, ^ound them in 

 two small villages, one on Mississippi r., 

 the other on Cannon r., aggregating 150 

 people in 20 lodges. Shakea was then 

 their chief, subordinate to Wabeshaw of 

 the Kiyuksa. They were under Wakute 

 ('Shooter') at the time of the Sioux out- 

 break in 1862. 



Eambosandata.— Neill in Minn. Hist. Coll., I, 263, 

 1858 (trans. ' mountain beside the water'). Ean- 

 bosandata.— Long, Exped. St Peter's R., I, 380, 

 1824. Hamine-chan.— Prcscott in Sehoolcraft. Ind. 

 Tribes, n, 171, 18ri2. He-mini-caij.— Dor.sey in 15th 

 Rep. B. A. E., 215, 1897. Hemnica.— Ibid. He- 



