BULL. 30] 



KUIYAMU KULCHANA 



733 



ary settlement of the Bear clan of the 

 Hopi, about 1 m. n. w. of Oraibi. — Voth, 

 Traditions of the Hopi, 23, 1905. 



Kuiyamu. {Ku-V-j/a/'-mu). One of the 

 two former populous Chumashan vil- 

 lages, popularly known as Dos Pueblos, 

 w. of Santa Barbara, Cal. (h. w. h.) 



Kukak. A Kaniagmiut Eskimo village 

 onKukakbay, s. e. coastof Alaskapenin., 

 Alaska; pop. 37 in 18S0. 

 Kukak.— Petroff in 10th Census, Alaska. 28, 1884. 

 Toujajak.— LangsdorfY. Voy., ll, 23.5, 1814. 



Kukamukamees. A Kyuquot village on 

 Mission id., Kvuquot sd., w. coast of 

 Vancouver id.— Can. Ind. Aff.,264, 1902. 



Kukan ('finger-nail'). An Ita Eskimo 

 settlement near McCormick bay, N.Green- 

 land. — Heilprin,' Peary Relief Exped., 

 128, 1893. 



Kukanuwu {KAq.'anuwiV). An old 

 Tlingit town in the Huna country on the 

 N. side of Cross sd., Alaskan coast. Dis- 

 tinct from Hukanuwu. (j. r. s.) 



Kukinishyaka. The Red-corn clan of 

 Acoma and Laguna pueblos, N. Mex. 

 See Ydka. 



Ku'kanishyaka-hanoq'-''. — HodgeinAm.Anthrop., 

 IX, 349, 189ti (Acoma form; yi'ika = 'corn', hdnoqch 

 = 'people'). Ku'kinishyaka-hano'''. — Ibid. (La- 

 guna form). 



Kukkuiks {KHk-kuils'', 'pigeons'). A 

 society of the Ikunuhkahtsi, or All Com- 

 rades, in the Piegan tribe; it is made up 

 of men who have been to war several 

 times. — Grinnell, Blackfoot Lodge Tales, 

 221, 1892. 



Kukluktuk. A Kuskwogmiut Eskimo 

 village on the left bank of Kuskokwim 

 r., 30 m. below Kolmakof, Alaska; pop. 

 51 in 1880, 20 in 1890. 



Kochlogtogpagamiut.— Eleventh Census, Alaska, 

 164, IS'JS. Kokhlokhtokhpagamute.— F'etroff in 10th 

 Census, Alaska, 16, 1,SS4. Kukluktuk.— Baker, 

 Geog. Diet. Alaska, 2.54, 1902. 



Kukoak ( QitqofVq). A Songish division 

 at McNeill bay, s. end of Vancouver id. — 

 Boas in 6th Rep. N. W. Tribes Can., 17, 

 1890. 



Kukpaurungmiut. An Eskimo tribe that 

 formerly occupied the country l)etween 

 Pt Belcher and C. Beaufort, Alaska, now 

 much dwindled, having a village called 

 Kokolik at Pt Lav with 30 inhabitants in 

 1880. In 1900 the tribe numbered 52. 

 Kookpovoros. — Kelly, Arctic Eskimos, 13, 1890. 

 Koopowro Mutes.— Wells and Kellv in Rep. Bur. 

 Ed.lsy;, 1212, 1898. Kukpaurungmiut,— llth Cen- 

 sus, Alaska, 1.5S, 1893. 



Kukuch. The Lizard clan of the Hopi. 

 Kokob. — Votli, Oraibi Summer Snake Ceremony, 

 283, 1903. KU'-kU-tci.— Stephen in 8th Rep. B. A. 

 E., 39, 1891. Kiikiitc wiiiwu.- Fewkes in 19th Rep. 

 B. A. E., 583, 1901 {irirurii^-clan'). Kukuts.— 

 Dor.sey and Voth, Oraibi Soval, 13, 1901. Kuku- 

 tsi.— Voth, Hopi Proper Names, 89, 1905. 



Kukncliomo ('footprint mound'). A 

 pueblo ruin, consisting of two conical 

 mounds, on the Eastmesaof Tusayan, n. e. 

 Arizona. It was built and occupied in 

 prehistoric time by Hopi clans closely 

 related to those of Sikyatki, with whom 

 they are supposed to have removed to 



Awatobi.— Fewkes in 17th Rep. B. A. E., 



587-588, 1898. 



Kukulek (Quqw'lEk-). A Songish divi- 

 sion residing at Cadboro bay. s. end of 

 Vancouver id. — Boas in 6th Rep. N. W. 

 Tribes Can., 17, 1890. 



Kukuliak. A Yuit Eskimo village on 

 the N. shore of St Lawrence id., Bering 

 sea.— Tebenkof (1849) quoted by Baker, 

 Geog. Diet. Alaska, 1902. 



Kukutwom. {K-ukntwo^m, 'waterfall'). 

 A Squawmish village community on the 

 E. side of Howe sd., Brit. Col. — Hill- 

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



Kukwakum ('the real Kwakiutl'). A 

 gens of the Kwakiutl proper, consisting of 

 two septs, the Guetela and the Komoyue. 

 K'kwa'kum.— Boas in 6th Rep. N. W. Tribes Can., 

 .54, 1890. Kukwa'kum.— Boas in Rep. Nat. Mus. 

 1895, 330, 1897. Kwakoom. — Tolmie and Dawson, 

 Vocabs. Brit. CoL, IIsb, 1884. 



Kulahiyi (RiVkVil^i/l, or in the lower 

 Cherokee dialect, KHn1hi^)/1,irom kf(hVIn, 

 a plant used as salad by the Cherokee). 

 A former Cherokee town in x. e. Georgia, 

 from which Currahee mtn. takes its 

 name. (j. m. ) 



Kulaiapto. A former Maidu village be- 

 tween Mooretown and the village of 

 Tsuka, Butte CO., Cal. — Dixon in Bull. Am. 

 Mus. Nat. Hist., xvii, pi. xxxviii, 1905. 



Kulaken {K-u^laqEn). A Squawmish 

 village community on Burrard inlet, 

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

 S., 475, 1900. 



Kulanapan Family. Adopted by Powell 

 (7th Rep. B. A. E., 87, 1891 ) as the name 

 of a linguistic family in Sonoma, Lake, 

 and Mendocino cos., Cal., comprising the 

 group of tribes generally known as Porno, 

 q. V. See also KithJanapo. 

 xKula-napo.— Gibbs in Schoolcraft, Ind. Tribes, 

 HI, 421, 1853 (the name of one of the Clear Lake 

 bands). >Mendocino(?).— Latham in Trans. Philol. 

 Soc. Lond., 77, 18.56 (name suggested for Chowe- 

 shak, Batemdaikai, Kulanapo, Yukai.and Khwak- 

 lamayu languages): Latham, Opuscula, 343, 1860; 

 Latham, Elem. Comp. Philol., 410, 1862 (as above). 

 >Pomo.— Powers in Overland Monthly, ix, 498, 

 Dec. 1872 (general description of habitat and of 

 family); Powers in Cont. N. A. Ethnol., in, 146, 

 1877; Powell, ibid., 491 (vocabularies of Gal-li-no- 

 m(5-ro, Yo-kai'-a, Ba-tem-da-kaii, Chau-i-shek, 

 Yu-kai, Ku-la-na-po, H'hana, Venaambakaiia, 

 Ka'-bi-na-pek, Chwaehamaju); Gatschet in Mag. 

 Am. Hist., 16, 1877 (gives habitat and enumerates 

 tribesof family); Gatschet in Beach, Ind.MisceL, 

 436,1877; Keane, in Stanford, Compend., Cent, and 

 So. Am., app., 476, 1878 (includes Castel Pomos, 

 Ki, Cahto, Choam, Chadela. Matomey Ki, Usal or 

 Calamet, Shebalne Pomos, Gallinomeros, Sanels, 

 Socoas, Lamas, Comachos): <Pomo. — Bancroft 

 Nat. Races, in, 566, 1882 (includes Ukiah, Galli- 

 nomero, Masallamagoon, Gualala, Matole, Kula- 

 napo, San61, Y'onios, Choweshak, Batemdakaie, 

 Chocuyem,01amentke,Kainamare,andChwaeha- 

 maju; of these, Chocuvem and Olamentke are 

 Moquelumnan). =Kuianapan.— Powell in 7th 

 Rep. B. A. E., 87, 1891. 



Kulatsen ( KuHatsEn) . A Squawmish vil- 

 lage community on the e. side of Howe 

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

 A. S., 474, 1900. 



Kulchana ('strangers': Alitena name), 

 A nomadic Athapascan tribe in Alaska. 



