132 



ANTHROPOLOGICAL SURVEY IN ALASKA 



[ETH. ANN. 40 



Native Villages on the Yukon and in the Vicinity, 1843 (Zagoskin, III, 



39-41)— Continued 



Villages 



ESKIMO 



Kavliunag-miut 



Nygyklig-miut 



Kanyg-miut 



Ankachag-miut 



Takchag-miut 



Ikuag-miut 



Nukhluiag-miut 



I kog-iniut 



Ikaligvig-miut 



Pai-uiiut 



Total of Kvikhpag-miut 



Total 



681 



Adult 

 males 



185 



Houses 



38 



Dall, referring to 1866-67 (Contr. Am. Ethn., I, 23, 39), esti- 

 mated the number of the Yukon Eskimo at 1,000 and that of the 

 Yukon and Koyukuk Indians, from the mouth of the Tanana down- 

 ward, at 2,800. Only a few sites of villages are incidentally given 

 by Dall. 



Ivan Petrof, as a special agent for Alaska of the United States 

 Census for 1880, reports himself the following Indian settlements 

 and numbers of inhabitants on the Yukon (Compil. Narrat. Expl. 

 Alaska, 68; gives also data on Eskimo, but his arrangement and 

 unidentifiable localities prevent these data from being used here) : 



Anvik station and village &i 



Single house 20 



Single house 12 



Single house 15 



Tanakhothaiak 52 



Single house 15 



Chageluk settlements 150 



Khatnotoutze 1 15 



Kaiakak 124 



Kaltag 45 



Nulato, station and village 163 



Koyukuk settlements 150 



Terentiefs station 15 



Big Mountain 100 



Single house 10 



Sakatalan 25 



Yukokakat 



Melozikakat 30 



Mentokakat 20 



Soonkakat 12 



Medvednaia 15 



Novo-kakat 106 



Kozmas 11 



Nuklukaiet 27 



Rampart village 110 



Port Yukon 82 



Later demographic records on the Yukon and its tributaries ami 

 on the coast comprise additional data by Petrof, published as a 

 part of the Eleventh (1890) United States Census and arranged 

 by districts and linguistic groups; and the data of three subsequent 



