HARKINGTOX] PLACE-NAMES ' 259 



[15:29] Nambe Jokii''u 'cane-cactus arroyo' {jo 'cane-cactus' ' Opun- 



tia arborescens'; hii'u ' large groove ' 'arroyo'). 



The upper part of this arroyo is shown on map [22]. Cf. 



• [22:34]. 



Unlocated 



Santa Clara Jqvh'q.ygi 'end of the willows' (j^Vf 'willow'; k'qygi 

 said to mean 'end'). This name was obtained from a single Santa 

 Clara infoimant, and was said by him to refer to a place near 

 Tssewadi [15:2i]. It was obtained in connection with the writer's 

 endeavor to get information respecting Bandelier's "Yam 

 P'hamba"; see "Yam P'hamba" under [15:24]. 



(1) Eng. Montevista. (<Span.). =Span. (2). 



(2) Span. Montevista 'forest view'. =Eng. (1). 



This place is said to be a small Mormon settlement a short dis- 

 tance north of Santa Cruz [15:19]. 



Santa Clara ''OMomhodi 'large sand -pile' (^oJi'qyf 'sand'; ho,ii 'large 

 pile'). 



This name was given as that of a place in Santa Cruz Cafiada 

 [15:18] a short distance above Santa Cruz [15:19]. The inform- 

 ant was unable to locate the place more definitely. It can hardly 

 be the "Yam P'ham-ba" of Bandelier; see under [29:45] and 

 [15:24]. 



Santa Clara P'a'jobii'u 'winnowing basket corner' {p'ajo 'shallow 

 roundish basket used for winnowing wheat and other purposes'; 

 5«'?« 'large low roundish place'). 



This is the corner which gives the ruin [15:21] its name. Its 

 exact location is uncertain. 



"Potrero".' The name means 'tongue of land' 'enclosed piece of 

 pasture land'. "The natives of this pueblo [San Cristobal [29:45]] 

 and of San Lazaro [29:52] were forced by hostilities of the 

 Apache, the eastern Keresan tribes, and the Pecos to trans- 

 fer their pueblos to the vicinity of San Juan [11: San Juan 

 Pueblo], where the towns were rebuilt under the same names 

 (Bancroft, Ariz, and N. Mex., p. 186, 1889). This removal 

 (which was more strictly' to a place called Pueblito [Puebla 

 [15:25]] near the present Potrero, about 2 m. e. of Santa Cruz 

 [15:19], on the Rio Santa Cruz [15:18]), occurred after the Pueblo 

 revolt of 1680 and prior to 1692, at which latter date the natives 

 were found by Vargas in their new locality. The pueblo [two 

 pueblos?] was abandoned in 1694, but was later reoccupied, and 

 was finally deserted in 1696 after the murder of their missionary 

 in June of that year. Most of their descendants are now among 

 the Hopi of Arizona."' The present writer's Tewa and Mexi- 



1 Hodge in Handbook Inds., pt. 2, p. 42S, 1910. 



