'688 



KILHERHURSH KIMESTUNNE 



[b. a. e. 



Keechik— Petroff in 10th Census, Alaska, 4t\, 1SS4. 

 Kichik. — Ibid., map. Kilchikh. — Eleventh Cen- 

 sus, Alaska, 94, 1893. 



Kilherhursh. A Tillamook village, 

 named after a chief, at the entrance of 

 Tillamook l)ay, Oreg., in. 1805. 

 Kil-har-hursf s Town, — Orig. Jour, Lewis and 

 Clark, VI, 71, 19U."i. Kilherhursh. — Lewisand Clark, 

 Exped., II, 117, 1814. 



Kilherner. A Tillamook village in 1805, 

 named after a chief, on Tillamook bay, 

 Oreg., at the mouth of a creek, 2 m. from 

 Kilherhursh. 



Kil-har-nar's town. — Grig. Jour. Lewis and Clark, 

 VI, 71, iga'i. Kilherner. — Lewis and Clark, Exped., 

 II, 117, 1814. 



Kilikunom. A division of the Witu- 

 komnom branch of tRe Yuki of n. Cali- 

 fornia, (a. l. k. ) 



Kilimantavie ( from Ke-Uv^ -a-tow-tin, 

 'sling. ' — Murdoch ). A Kunmiut Eskimo 

 village on the Arctic coast w. of Wain- 

 wright inlet, Alaska; pop. 45 in 1880. 

 Kelamantowruk,- — U. S. Hvdrog. chart 68 quoted 

 by Baker, Geog. Dist. Alaska, 239, 1902. Ke-le'v- 

 a-tow-tin. — Murdoch quoted by Baker, ibid. Ki- 

 lametagag-miut. — Tikhinenief (18(11) quoted liy 

 Baker, ibid. Kilauwitawiii. — Murdoch in 9th Rep. 

 B. A. E., 44, 1892. Kilimantavie.— Ilydrog. charts, 

 op. cit. Kilyamiitagvik. — Zagoskin, Dcscr. Russ. 

 Poss. Am., pt. I, 74, 1.S47. Kolumakturook.— Petroli" 

 in lOthCensus, Alaska, niai),lNS4. Kolumatourok. — 

 Petroff, Rep. on Alaska, 59, 1880. Kolumaturok. — 

 Nelson in 18th Rep. B. A. E., map, 1899. 



Kilinigmiut ('people of the serrated 

 country' ). A subtribe of theSuhinimiut 

 Eskimo inhabiting the region about C. 

 Chidley, x. Labrador. Pop. fewer than 40. 

 Kilin'ig myut.— Turner in 11th Rep. B. A. E., 170, 

 1,S94. 



Kilistinons of the Nipisiriniens, Men- 

 tioned by the Jesuit Kel. of lt>58 (Thwaites 

 ed., XLiv, 249, 1S99) as one of the 4 divi- 

 sions of the Cree, so called because they 

 traded with the Nipissing. They lived 

 l)et\veen L. Nipigon and Moose r., Can- 

 ada, though they were not very station- 

 ary. Their population at the date given 

 was estimated at 2,600. 



Kiliuda (perhaps Aleut, from liliak 

 'morning', uda 'bay'). A Kaniagmiut 

 Eskimo village on the e. coast of Kodiak 

 id., Alaska; pop. 36 in 1880, 22 in 1890. 

 Kiliuda.— Baker, Geog. Diet. Alaska, 1902. Kil- 

 iuda.— Petroff in 10th Census, Alaska, 29, 1884. 



Kiliwi. A Yuman band of a do7.en 

 people who furnished Gabl) a vocabulary 

 when he visited them, in Apr. 1867, near 

 Santo Tomas mission, 150 m. n. w. of Santa 

 Borja, Lower California. The vocabu- 

 lary is published in Zeitschr. f. Ethnolo- 

 gic, 1877. The Kiliwi were reported as 

 still existing in 1906. 



Killaxthokle. A Chinookan tribe or vil- 

 lage, apparently named after its chief, on 

 Shoahvater bay, Wash., in 1805. Men- 

 tioned twice by Lewis and Clark, from 

 Indian information, w^ho estimated the 

 poj)ulation at 100 in 8 houses and at 200 

 in 10 houses. 



Ca-last-ho-cle. — Grig. .lour. Lewis and Clark (180.5), 

 VI, lis, 190.'>. GaLa'qstxoqL. — Boas, iufn, 190.5. 

 Killaxthocles. — Coues, Lewis and Clark Exped., 

 1252, 1892. Kil-laxt-ho-kle's T.— Grig. Jour., op. 



cit. Killaythocles.— Schoolcraft, Ind. Tribes, in, 

 571, 18.53. 



Killbuck. See Gelelemend. 



Killbuck's Town. A former Delaware 

 town on the e. side of Killbuck cr., about 

 10 m. s. of Wooster, AVayne co., Ohio; 

 occupied as early as 1764 by a chief named 

 Killbuck, from whom it received the 

 name. (j. m. ) 



Killhag. A sort of trap, defined by 

 Bartlett (Diet. Americanisms, 332, 1877) 

 as "a wooden trap used by the hunters 

 in Maine"; from kUliUjan in the Malecite 

 dialect of Algonquian, signifying 'trap', 

 from the radical kllh, 'to catch or keep 

 caught', and the suffix radical igan, 'in- 

 strument.' (a. f. c. ) 



Killikinnick. See Kianikinnict. 



Killisnoo. A modern settlement of the 

 Hutsnuwu on Killisnoo id., near Admi- 

 ralty id. , Alaska. They have been drawn 

 there through the establishment of oil 

 works by the whites. 



Kanas-nii.— Krause, Tlinkit Ind., 105, 1885. Ken- 

 asnow. — Ibid, (quoted). 



Kilpanlus. A Cowichan tribe in Cow- 

 itchiu vallej', Vancouver id., consisting 

 of only 4 people in 1904. 



Kil-pan-hus,— Can. Ind. AfT. for 1883, 190. Kil- 

 panlus.— Ibid., 1901, pt. 2, lti4, 1902. Tilpa'les.— 

 Boas, MS., B.A. E.. 1S87. Tlip-pah-lis.— Can. Ind. 

 Aff. for 1880. 31(5. Tlip-pat-lis.— Ibid., 1879, 308. 



Kils-haidagai ( K/ils xd'-id.iga-i, ' penin- 

 sula people' ). A branch of the Kagials- 

 kegawai, a family group belonging to the 

 Eaven clan of the Haida. They took 

 their name from a point at the outer end 

 of the tongue of land on which Skedans 

 formerly stood, and where were most of 

 their houses. — S wanton, Cont. Haida, 

 269, 1905. 



Kilstlai-djat-takinggalung' {Kt^hLa-i djat 

 t.'((l-.'/'ii(/alAil, 'chieftainess' children'). 

 A subdivision of the Hlgahetgu-lanas, a 

 familv of the Eaven clan of the Haida. — 

 Swanton, Cont. Haida, 270, 1905. 



Kilutsai {GyUdts'a^r, 'people of the 

 river's arm'). A Tsimshian family and 

 town near Metlakahtla, on the n. w. coast 

 of British Columl)ia. 



Gyilots'a'r.— Boas in Zeitschr. fiir Ethnol., 232, 188. 

 Kel-ut-saii.— Kane, Wand, in N. A., app., 1859. 

 Kill,on,chan. — Howard, Noteson Northern Tribes, 

 1854, MS.^B. A. E. Killoosa.— Horetzky, Canada 

 on Pacific, 212, l.s74. Killowitsa.— Brit. Col. map, 

 1S72. Killutsar.— Krause, Tlinkit Ind., 318, 188.5. 

 Kilootsa,— Tolmie -smd Daw.son, Vocab.s. Brit. 

 Col., 114b, 1884. Kil-utsai.— Dorsey in Am. Antiq., 

 XIX, 281, 1897. 



Kim. The Mountain Lion clan of the 

 Tigua pueblo of Isleta, N. Mex. 



Kim-famin. — Hodge (after Lummis) in Am. 

 Anthrop., ix, 351, 1896 (Va'niin = 'people'). 



Kimaksuk. A Kinguamiut Eskimo vil- 

 lage on Cumberland sd., lat. 65°, Baffin 

 land. — McDonald, Discoverv of Hogarth's 

 Sd., 86, 1841. 



Kimestunne ( ' people opposite a cove of 

 deep water'). A former village of the 

 Mishikhwutmetunne on'Coquille r., Oreg. 

 Ki-mes' tdnne'. —Dorsey in Jour. Am. Folk-lore, 

 111,232,1890. Ku-mas' :>unne'.— Ibid. 



