722 



KOIK AHTEN OK KOK OP 



[b. a. 



of the Ntlakyapamuk on the e. side of 

 Fraser r., 25 m. above Yale, Brit. Col. 

 Boston Bar.— Name given bv whites. Koia'um. — 

 Teit in Mem. Am. Mu.s. Nat. Hist., ii, 169, 1900. 

 ftuiyone.— Brit. Col. map, Ind. AtT., Victoria, 1872 

 (probably identical). 



Koikahtenok {QoVk'axtenox, 'whale peo- 

 ple') . A clan of the Wikeno, a Kwakiiitl 

 tribe.— Boas in Rep. Nat. Mns. for 1895, 

 328, 1897. 



Koikoi {Xoe^.we. a supernatural being, 

 sometimes described as living in ponds; 

 used as a mask by the Lillooet, many 

 coast Salish, and thesouthern Kwakiutl. — 

 Boas) . A Squawmish village community 

 on Burrard inlet, Brit. Col. 

 aoiQoi.— Hill-Tont in Rep. Brit. A. A. S., 474, 1900. 

 Xoe'xoe. — Boas, inf n, igCJ. 



Koinchush ('wild cat'). A Chickasaw 

 clan of the Koi phratrv. 



Ko-in-chush.— Mciik-aii, Anc". Soc, 163, 1877. Ko-in- 

 tchush.— Gatsehet, Creek MigT. Leg., I, 96, 1884. 



Koinisun [Kdhd^suii). An Ita Eskimo 

 settlement on Inglefield gulf, n. Green- 

 land. — Stein in Petermanns Mitt., no. 9, 

 map, 1902. 



Koiskana (from koes, or kiro^rs, a bush 

 the bark of which is used for making 

 twine; some say it is a Stuwigh or Atha- 

 pascan name, but this seems doubtful). 

 A village of the Nicola band of Ntlakya- 

 pamuk near Nicolar. , 29 m. above Spences 

 Bridge, Brit. Col.; pop. 52 in 1901, the 

 last time the name appears. 

 Koaskuna'.— Hill-'l'dUt in Rep. Ethnol. Surv. 

 Can., 4, 1899. Koiskana'.— Teit in Mem. Am. Mvis. 

 Nat. Hist., II, 174, 1900. Kuinskanaht.— Can Ind. 

 Aff. for 1892, 313. Kwois-kun-a'.— Daw.son in Trans. 

 Roy. Soc. Can. for 1891, sec. li, 44. Pitit Creek.— 

 Teit, op. cit. (name given by whites). Qais- 

 kana'.— Teit, op. cit. Quinskanaht.— Can. Ind. 

 Aff. for 1898, 419. Quinskanht.— Ibid, for 1901, 166. 

 Quis-kan-aht.— Ibid, for 1886, 232. ftuss-kan-aht.— 

 Ibid, for 1883, 191. 



Koiyo (K6i-yo). A former Chumashan 

 village at Canada del Coyote, A'^entura 

 CO., Cal. — Henshaw, Buenaventura MS. 

 vocab., B. A. E., 1884. 



Kojejewininewug ( KuclncMwlnlnlicug; 

 from kuchlchlw, referring to the straits and 

 bends of the rivers and lakes on which 

 they resi<led; liiiiiivug, 'people'). A 

 division of the Chippewa formerly living 

 on Rainy lake and river on the n. bound- 

 ary of Minnesota and in the adjacent part 

 of British America. 



Algonquins of Rainy Lake. — Lewis and Clark, 

 Travels, .55, 1806. Kocheche Wenenewak. — Long, 

 Exped. St Peter's R., ii, l'>3, 1824. Ko-je-je-win- 

 in-e--wug.— Warren {\xb2) in Minn. Hist. Sor. Coll., 

 V, 84, 188ri. Kotchitchi-wininiwak. — Gatschet, 

 Ujibwa MS., B. A. E., 1882. Kutcitciwininiwag. — 

 Wm. Jones, inf'n, 1906. Lac la Pluie Indians.— 

 Hind, Red River Exped., l, 82. I860. Rainy-lake 

 Indians.— Schoolcraft (1838) in H.R.Doc.l07, 2.^th 

 Cong., 3d sess., 9, 1839. 



Kokaia ( Qo-Qm^d, 'maggot-fly,' because 

 there are many found there in summer). 

 An abandoned Chilliwack village on 

 Chilliwack r., s. Brit. Col.— Hill-Tout in 

 Rep. Ethnol. Surv. Can., 4, 1902. 



Kokaitk. A division of the Bellabella, 

 living on n. Millbank sd. 

 K-'6'k-aitq.— Boas in 6th Rep. N. W. Tribes Can., 

 Wi, 1890. Kok-wai-y-toch.— Kane, Wand, in N. 

 Am., app., 1859. Kook-wai-wai-toh.— Tolmie and 



Dawson, Vocabs. Brit. Col., 117b, 1884. Koqueigh- 

 tuk. — Brit. Col. map, 1872. ft'6'qa-itx.— Boas in 

 Rep. Nat. Mns. for 1895, 328, 1897. 



Kokaman. Mentioned by writers be- 

 tween 1851 and 1855 as a Karok village 

 on Klamath r., Huml)oldt co., Cal. In 

 1851 the chief's name was said to be Pa- 

 namonee, but this is probably an error, 

 as Panamenik is the Karok village at 

 Orleans. 



Coc-co-man.— McKee (1851) in Sen. Ex. Doc. 4,32d 

 Cong.,spec.se.ss., 161, 1853 (upper Klamath tribe). 

 Cock-o-mans.— Ibid., 215 (given as Hupa band). 

 Coc-ko-nan.— Ibid., 194 (a Patesiek band). Cok-ka- 

 mans. — Meyer, Nach dem Sacramento, 282, 18.56. 

 Kokhittan ('box-hnuse people'). A 

 Tlingit sot'ial group, forming a subdivi- 

 sion of the Kagwantan, q. v. 

 Kok hit tan.— Swahton, field notes, B. A. E., 1904. 

 Kukettan.— Krau,se, Tlinkit Ind., 113, 1885. Ku- 

 kittan,— Ibid. 



Koknas-liadai(.£''oA;^-nas.-7iad'd^i, 'snow- 

 owl house people ' ) . Given by Boas ( 5th 

 Rep. N. W. Tribes Canada, 27, 1889) as a 

 subdivision of the Yaku-lanas, a family of 

 the Raven clan of the Alaskan Haida, but 

 in reality it is only a house name belong- 

 ing to that family group. (.i. r. s. ) 



Koko. An Ikogmiut Eskimo village on 

 the N. bank of the Yukon, Alaska, below 

 Ikogmiut. 



Kocbkomut.— Post route map, 1903. Koko.— Baker, 

 Geog. Diet. Alaska, 1902. 



Kokoaeuk {Kokoae^uk') . A village of the 

 Matsqui tribe of Cowichan at the s. w. 

 point of Sumass lake, near Fraser r. , Brit. 

 Col. — Boas in Rep. Brit. A. A. S., 454, 

 1894. 



Kokob. The Burrowing-owl clan of the 

 Hopi of Oraibi, Arizona. 

 Kokob.— Voth in Field Columb. Mus. Pub., no. 55, 

 13, 19U1. Kokop.— Stephen quoted bv Mindeleff 

 in 8th Rep. B. A. E., 105, 1891 (cf. Kokop, the Fire- 

 wood clan). 



Kokoheba {Ko-ko-he^-bd). The name of 

 a village which has come to be applied to 

 an almost extinct Mono tribe in Burr val- 

 ley, with one village over the divide, look- 

 ing into the valley of Sycamore cr. , n. of 

 Kings r., Cal. — Merriam in Science, xix, 

 916, June 17, 1904. 



Kokoiap ( K-okoiap\ ' place of strawber- 

 ries ' ) . A village of the Ntlakyapamuk on 

 Fraser r., above Siska, Brit. Col. — Hill- 

 Tout in- Rep. Ethnol. Surv. Can., 5, 1899. 

 Kokolik. A Kukpaurungmiut Eskimo 

 village at Pt Lay, Arctic coast, Alaska, 

 with 30 inhabitants in 1880. 



Kokomo ('young grandmother'). A 

 Miami village, named after a chief, that 

 stooil on the site of the present Kokomo, 

 Ind. 



Ko-ko-mah village.— Hongh, map in Ind. Geol. 

 Rep., 18N3, 



Kokop. The Firewood phratry of the 

 Hopi, comprising the Kokop (Firewood), 

 Ishauu (Coyote), Kwewu (Wolf), Sik- 

 yataiyo (Yellow Fox), Letaiyo_ (Gray 

 Fox ), Zrohona (small mammal,. sp. inco^/. ), 

 Masi (Masauuh, a supernatural being), 

 Tuvou (Pinon), Hoko (Juniper), Awata 

 (Bow), Sikyachi (small yellow bird), and 

 Tuvuchi (small red bird) clans. Accord- 



