748 



KWIKAK KWULCHICHICHESHK 



[b. a. e. 



Kwikak. A Chnagmiut Eskimo village 

 on the coast of the Yukon delta, s. of 

 Black r. , Alaska. 



Kwikagamiut. — Coast Surv. (1898) quoted by Ba- 

 ker, Geog. Diet. Alaska, 1902. Kwikak.— Baker, 

 ibid. 



Kwikluagmiut. One of the two divi- 

 sions into which Holmberg divided the 

 Ikogniiut of the Yukon delta; so named 

 becau.se they inhabit Kv^ikluak slough or 

 pass. 



Kwikhluagemut.— Dall, Alaska, 407, 1870. K-with- 

 luag'emut. — Holmberg quoted by Dall in Cont. 

 N. A. EthiKil., 1,17, 1877. 



Kwikoaenok ( KvjVkoaenux, ' those at the 

 lower end of the village') . A gens of the 

 Guanaenok, a Kwakiutl tribe. — Boas in 

 Rep. Nat. Mus. 1895, 331, 1897, 



Kwikooi. A Shuswap village at the 

 outlet of Adams lake, at the head of 

 Thompson r., interiorof British Columbia; 

 pop., with Slahaltkam (q. v. ), 190 in 1904. 

 Adams lake.— Can. Ind. Aff.,, 259, 1882. Kwi-kooi'.— 

 Daw.son in Trans. Roy. Soc. Can. for 1891, sec. ii, 

 44. 



Kwikpagmiut. One of the two divisions 

 into which Holmberg divided the Ikog- 

 miut of the Yukon delta, Alaska; so 

 nameil because they inhabit Kwikpak 

 slough or pass. The name has also been 

 applied to the Ikogmiut generally. 

 Kwikhpag'emiit. — Holmberg quoted bv Dall in 

 Cont. N. A. Etiinol., I, 17, 1877. Kwiklipagmut.- 

 Dall, Alaska, 407, 1870. 



Kwilaishauk {KriHl-ai&-auk). A former 

 Yaquina village on the s. side of Yaquina 

 r., Oreg. — Dorsey in Jour. Am. Folk-lore, 

 III, 229, 1890. 



Kwilchana ( QvUtca^na, sig. doubtful ) . 

 A village of the Nicola band of the Ntla- 

 kyapamuk, on Nicola lake, Brit. Col. ; 

 pop. Ill in 1901, the last time the name 

 appears. 



Kinsaatin.— Can. Ind. Aff., 302, 1893. Koiltca'na.— 

 Hill-Tout in Rep. Ethnol. Surv. Can., 4, 1899. Kui- 

 saatin.— Can. Ind. Aff., 313, 1892. Guinshaatin.— 

 Ibid., pt. II, 166, 1901. awiltca'na.— Teit in Mem. 

 Am. Mus. Nat. Hist.,ii, 174, 1900. 



Kwilokuk. An Eskimo village in the 

 Kuskokwim district, Alaska; pop. 12 in 

 1890. 



ftuilochugamiut. — Eleventh Ccn.sus, Alaska, 164, 

 1893. 



Kwilsieton. A division of the Chasta 

 on Rogue r., Oreg., in 1854, which J. O. 

 Dorsey (MS., B. A. E.) thought may be 

 identical with the Kushetunne of the 

 Tututni. 

 Quil-si-eton.— IT. S. Ind. Treat. (18.54), 23, 1873. 



Kwinak. A Kuskwogmiut Eskimo vil- 

 lage and Moravian mission in Alaska, on 

 the E. side of Kuskokwim r., at its mouth; 

 pop. 83 in 1880, 109 in 1890. 

 Kwinak. — Sarichef (1826) quoted by Baker, Geog. 

 Dist. Alaskti, 1902. Kwygyschpainagmjut. — Holm- 

 berg, Ethnog. Skizz., 5, 185.5. Q,uinchaha.— Post- 

 route map, 1903. Q,uinehaha. — Bruce, Alaska, 

 map, 1885. Quinehahamute. — Petroff, Rep. on 

 Alaska, 53, ISSi. ftuinhaghamiut. — Eleventh Cen- 

 sus, Alaska, 100, 1893. 



Kwineekcha [Kwin-eek'-clia, 'long 

 body'). A subclan of the Delawares 

 (q. v.). -—Morgan, Anc. Soc, 172, 1877. 



Kwingyap. The Oak clan of the Asa 

 phi-atry of the Hopi. 



Kwi'nob'i.— Stephen in 8th Rep. B. A. E., 39, 1891. 

 Kwin-yap wiin-wu. — Fewkes in Am. Anthrop., vil, 

 405, 1894 ((r»/(-i(7;,=' clan'). Quingoi. — Bourke, 

 Snake Dance, 117,1884. 



Kwisaesekeesto ( Kwis-aese-kees' -to, 

 'deer'). A subclan of the Delawares 

 (q.v.). — Morgan, Anc. Soc, 172, 1877. 



Kwit chak u t ch in ('people of the 

 steppes'). A Kutchin tribe inhabiting 

 the country between Mackenzie and An- 

 derson rs., lat. 68°, British America. 

 Kodhell-ven-Kouttchin. — Petitot, Autourdu lacdes 

 Esclaves, 361, 1891 ( = ' people of themargin of the 

 sterile Eskimo lands' ). Kiitch'-a kutch'in. — Ross, 

 M.S. notes on Tinne, B. A.E. ( = ' people in a country 

 without mountains'). Kwitcha - Kuttchin.— Pe- 

 titot, Diet. Dene-Dindjie, xx, 1876. Kwitchia- 

 Kutchin. — Petitot, in Bui. Soc. de G6og. Paris, 

 chart, 1875. 



Kwiumpus ( ' bear river people ' ) . A 

 Paiute tribe formerly living in the vicinity 

 of Beaver, s. w. Utah; pop. 29 in 1873. — 

 Powell in Ind. Aff. Rep. 1873, 50, 1874. 

 Cf. Cnmumhah. 



Kwohitsauk. See Wovoka. 



Kwolan {K'lvo'lim, 'ear'). A Squaw- 

 inish village community on the right bank 

 of Squawmisht r., Brit. Col. — Hill-Tout 

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



Kwoneatshatka. An unidentified divi- 

 sion of the Nootka near the n. end of 

 Vancouver id. — Hale in U. S. Expl. 

 Exped., VI, 569, 1846. 



Kworatem. A locality and a camp or 

 village at the confluence of Klamath and 

 Salmon rs., n. w. Cal., on the e. bank of 

 the former and the s. bank of the latter. 

 The name is not Karok, in whose terri- 

 tory the place is situated, but from the 

 Yurok language spoken farther down 

 Klamath r. According to the Yurok cus- 

 tom, Kworatem, being the name of the 

 place nearest the mouth of Salmon r., was 

 used for the river itself, though always 

 with the addition of a term like limenwri, 

 'stream.' The name Quoratem was er- 

 roneously used by (iibbs for the Karok 

 Indians, and was adopted by Powell in 

 the adjectival form Quoratean (q. v.) as 

 the name of the linguistic family consti- 

 tuted bv the Karok. (a. l. k. ) 

 Cor-a-tenT.- McKee (18.51) in Sen. Ex. Doc. 4, 32d 

 Cong., spec, se.ss., 163, 1853. Quoratem. — Gibbs 

 (1851) in Schoolcraft, Ind. Tribes, iii, 1,51, 1853. 

 Quoratems — Ibid. 



Kwotoa. A division of the Maidu at 

 Placerville, Eldorado co., Cal. 

 Kwo-to'-a.— Powers in Cont. M. A. Ethnol., iii,315, 

 1877. Quotoas.— Powers in Overland Mo., xii, 22, 

 1874. 



Kwsichichu {Ktvsi^-jci-)cu^). A former 

 Siuslaw village s. of Eugene City, Oreg. — 

 Dorsey in Jour. Am. Folk-lore, in, 230, 

 1890. 



Kwulaishauik {Kwul-aV -cau-ik). A 

 former Yaquina village on the n. side of 

 Yaquina r., Oreg. — Dorsey in Jour. Am. 

 Folk-lore, iii, 229, 1890. 



Kwulchichicheshk ( Kwul-tcl'- tci - tceck ) . 

 A former Yaquina village on the s. side 



