BULL. 30] 



KOKOP KOMACHO 



723 



ing to tradition they came from the Rio 

 (jirande, building the i)uel)lo of Sikyatki, 

 which the.v occupied until its destruction 

 in late prehistoric times. 

 Ko'-kop nyu-mu. — Fewkes in Am. Anthrop., vii, 

 403, 189i (ni/u-mi'( — ' phiatry'). 



Kokop. The Firewood clan of the Hopi, 

 the ancestors of whom came from Jemez 

 pueblo, New Mexico. 



Kokop wiiiwu. — Fewkes in 19th Rep. B. A. E., 584, 

 1900 ( iriTiin't = 'clan '). Ko-kop-wiiii-wii. — Fewkes 

 in .\m. Anthrop., vii, 403, 1894. Ku-ga.— Bourke, 

 Snake Dance, 117, 1884 (given doubtfully) . 



Kokopki (Hopi: 'house of the Firewood 

 people' ). A large, ancient, ruined pueblo, 

 attributed by the Hopi to the Firewood 

 clan, originally a Jemez people; situated 

 on a low mesa near Maupin's store, at 

 Mormon John's spring, in Jeditoh valley, 

 2J m. E. of Ream's Canyon school, Tu- 

 sayan, n. e. Arizona. See IMindeleff in 

 8th Rep. B. A. E., 590, 1898; Hough in 

 Rep. Nat. Mus. 1901, 333 et. seq., 1903. 



Cottonwood ruin. — HouRh, op. cit. (name given 

 locally by whites). Delcalsacat. — Ibid, ('wild 

 gourd ' : Xavalioname). HornHouse.— Mindeleff, 

 op. cit. Kokopki.— Fewkes, inf'n, 1906 {ki = 

 'house'). Kokopnyama. — Hough, op. cit. ("name 

 refers to the clans which 11 veil here and is prob- 

 ably not the ancient designation of the village"). 



Kokoskeeg. An unidentified tribe 

 which, according to Tanner (Narrative, 

 316, 1830), was known to the Ottawa and 

 was so called by them. 



Koksilah, A Cowichan tribe in Cowi- 

 tchin valley, e. coast of Vancouver id., 

 opposite Admiral id.; pop. 12 in 1904. 

 Cokesilah.— Can. Ind. Aff., Ixi, 1877. Kokesai- 

 lah.— Hrit. Col. map, Ind. Ail'., Vi<'toria. 1872. 

 Koksilah.— Can. Ind. Aff., pt. n, 164, 1901. Kulku- 

 isala.— Boas, MS., B. A. E., 1887. 



Koksoagmiut ('people of Big river'). 

 A subtribe of the Sukinimiut Eskimo liv- 

 ing on Koksoak (Big) r., n. Labrador. 

 They numbered fewer than 30 individuals 

 in 1893. 



Koakramint.— Boas in Am. Antlq., 40, 1888 (mis- 

 print) . Koksoagmyut. — Turner in 11th Rep. B. A. 

 E., 176, 1894. Koksoak Innuit.— Ibid., 179. Kok- 

 soak river people. — Ibid. Kouksoarmiut. — Boas In 

 6th Rep. B. A. E., 463. 470, 1888. 



Kokyan. The Spider clan of the Hopi. 

 Kohkang. — Voth, Oraibi Summer Snake Cere- 

 mony, '-'s'i, 19U3. Kohka;(namu. — Dorse v and Voth, 

 Oraibi Soyal, 9, 1901. Ko'-kyaii-a.— Stephen in 8th 

 Rep. B. A. E., 38, 1891. Kokyan winwu. — Fewkes 

 in 19th Rep. B. A. E, 584, 1900. Ko'-kyuii-uh wiin- 

 ■wii.— Fewkes in Am. Anthrop., vii, 4U4, 1894. 



Kolelakora. (QdJe^laQdin). A Squawmish 

 village community on Bowen id., Howe 

 sd., Brit. Col.— Hill-Tout in Rep. Brit. A. 

 A. S., 474, 1900. 



Kolmakof. A Moravian mission foundod 

 in lS8o among the Kuskwogmiut Eskimo 

 on Kuskokwim r., Alaska, 200 m. from its 

 mouth. It is on the site of a Russian 

 redoubt and trading post, first established 

 in 1832 by Ivan Simonson Lukeen, after 

 whom it was named for a time. In 1841 

 it was i)artially destroyed by the Indians 

 with tire, whereupon it was rebuilt by 

 Alexander Kolmakof and took his name. 

 The people are mixed Eskimo and Ath- 

 apascan. See Baker, Geog. Diet. Alaska, 

 1902. 



Kolmakof Redoubt.— Nelson in 18th Rep. B. A. E., 

 map, 1899. Kolmakovsky.— Hallock in Nat. Geog. 

 Mag., i.\,.s6, 1,81)8. 



Kolok. A former Chumashan village 

 at the old mill in C-arpinteria, e. of Santa 

 Barbara, Cal. 



K'-a'-lak.— Henshaw, Buenaventura MS. vocab., 

 B. A. E., 1884. 



Koloma. A division of the Nishinam, 

 at Coloma, between American r. and the 

 s. fork of Yuba r., in Eldorado co., Cai. 

 Colomas. — Powers in Overland Mo., Xll, 21,1874. 

 Ko-lo'-ma.— Powers in Cont. N. A. Ethnol., ill, 

 315, 1877. 



Koltsiowotl {K'oltsVowotl). A division 

 of the Nanaimo on the e. coast of Van- 

 couver id. — Boas in 5th Rep. N. W. Tribes 

 Can., 32, 1889. 



Koluschan Family. A linguistic family 

 embracing the Tlingit (q. v. ). The name 

 is said by Dall to be derived from Russian 

 kalusJd-a, 'a little trough,' but by others 

 from the Aleut word kvluga, signifying 

 'a dish,' the allusion being to the concave 

 dish-shaped labreta worn by the Tlingit 

 women. 



xHaidah.— Scouler in Jour. Roy. Geog. Soc.xi, 

 '219, 1841 (same as his Northern) . =Kaloshians.— 

 Dall in Proc. Am. A. A. S., 375, 1885 (gives tribes 

 and population) . =Klen-e-kate.— Kane, Wander-- 

 ings of an Artist, app., 18.i9 (a census of N. W. 

 coa.st tribes classified bv language). =Klen-ee- 

 kate,— Schoolcraft, Ind. Tribes, v, 489, 1855. <Ko- 

 looch. — Latham in Trans. Philol. Soc. Lond., ii, 

 31-50, 1846 (tends to merge Kolooch into E.squi- 

 mau.x); Latham in Jour. Ethnol. Soc. Lond., i, 

 163, 1848 (compared with Eskimo language); 

 Latham, Opuscula, 259, 276, 1860. =Koloschen.— 

 Berghaus (1,846), Physik. Atlas, map 17, 1848; ibid., 

 18.52; Buschmann Spuren der aztek. Sprache 680, 

 1869; Berghaus, Physik. Atlas, map 72, 1887. 

 <Koluch. —Latham, Nat. Hist. Man, 294, 1850 

 (more likely forms a subdivision of Eskimo than 

 a separate class; includes Kenay of Cook inlet, 

 Atna of Copper r., Koltshani, Ugalents, Sitkans, 

 Tungaas, Inkhnluklait, Magimut, Inkalit; Di- 

 gothi and Nehanni are classed as a "doubtful 

 Koluches"). =Koluschan.— Powell in 7th Rep. 

 B. A. E., 86, 1891. =Kolusch6n.— Gallatin in Trans, 

 and Coll. Am. Antiq. Soc, ii, 14, 1836 (i.slands 

 and adjacentcoast from 60"^ to .55° N. hit.). =Ko- 

 luschians. — Prichard, Phys. Hist. Mankind, v, 433, 

 1847 (follows Gallatin); Scouler (1846) in Jour. 

 Ethnol. Soc. Lond., l, 231, 1848. =Kolush.— 

 Latham, Elem. Comp. Philol., 401, 1862 (mere men- 

 tion of family with short vocabulary). =Kouli- 

 schen. — Gallatin in Trans, and Coll. Am. Antiq. 

 Soc, II, 306, 1836; Gallatin in Trans. Am. Ethnol. 

 Soc, II, pt. l,c,77,1848(Koulischen and Sitka lan- 

 guages); Gallatin in Schoolcraft, Ind. Tribes, in, 

 402,1853(Sitka,bet.52°and69°lat.). xNorthern.— 

 Scouler in Jour. Roy. Geog. Soc. Lond., xi, 218, 1841 

 (includes Koloshes and Tun Gha.sse) . =Thlin- 

 keet. — Keane in Stanford, Compend., Cent, and 

 So. Am., app., 460, 462, 1878 (from Mt St Elias to 

 Nass r.; includes Ugalenzes, Yakutats, Chilkats, 

 Hoodnids, Hoodsinoos, Takoos, Auks, Kakas, 

 Stikines, Eeliknfts, Tungass, Sitkas); Bancroft, 

 Nat. Races, in, 562, 579, 1882. =Thlinkets.— Dall in 

 Proc. Am. A. A. S., xviii, 268, 269. 1869 (divided 

 into Sitka-kwan, Stahkin-kwan, "Yakutats"). 

 =Thlinkit. — Tolmie and Dawson, Comp. Vocabs., 

 14, 1884 (vocab. of Skutkwan sept; also map show- 

 .ing distribution of family): Berghaus, Physik. 

 Atlas, map 72, 1887. =Thlinkithen.— Holmberg in 

 Finland Soc, 284, 18.56, fide Buschmann, 676, 1859. 

 =T'linkets,— Dall in Cont. N. A. Ethnol., I, 36, 

 1877 (divided into Yak'utats, Chilkaht'kwan, 

 Sitka-kwan, Stakhin'-kwiin, Kygah'ni) . =Tlin- 

 kit— Dall in Proc Am. A. A. S., 375, 1885 (enu- 

 merates tribes and gives population). 



Komacho {Ko-ma^-cho). A name ap- 

 plied by Powers (Cont. N. A. Ethnol., 

 Ill, 172, 1877) to the Pomo living in 



