.370 ETHNOGEOGKAPHY OF THE TEWA INDIANS [bth. ann. 29 



Nambe SefolceJe 'bluebird water heifjht' {sepo-, see next above; keJ^e 

 ■ 'height')- 



Tiiis is a place near Sepohu'u; see next item above. 

 Nambe S/'/ieiylcQ ' bell3'-ac-he arroyo' (.st^ 'belly'; Ae 'ache' 'achinj^'; 

 'ivy locative and adjectix e-forming postfix; Ico 'barranca'). 



This is a gulch somewhere near the eastern boundary of sheet 

 [23]. 

 Nambe TsepoJe 'eagle's head' {tse 'eagle' of any species; poda saUl to 

 mean 'head' < po 'head', .^e unexplained). Cf. [24:37]. 



This is a hillock south of Nambe, in plain sight of the pueblo, 



probably somewhere near [23:13]. The name was not known to 



the informants with whom the author took walks in the hills south 



of Nambe. 



Nambe Tslwl''i 'flaking-stone gap' {tsPi 'flaking-stone'; wi^i 'gap'). 



This is a gap in the hills or mountains far east of Nambe. Cf. 



Tsiwibiu!^ next below. 



Nambe Tdwibo-ii 'round hill by Haking-stone gap', referring to 



TsiwPi, next above {hodi 'roundish pile or hill'). 

 Upper Nambe, see B i7u7i /'teqwa undt^v [23:unlocated], above. 

 Vigil's place. See BihUilfeqwa under [23:unlocatedj, above. 



[24] NAMBE NORTH SHEET 



This sheet (map 24) shows the country immediately north of Nambe 

 Pueblo. No ruins are known to exist in the area. The place-names 

 wei'e all obtained at Nambe. 



[24:1] Nambe^tMoge ' the large arroyo ' (/m'« 'large groove' 'arroyo'; 

 so 'largeness' 'large'; ge 'down at' 'over at"). 



The uppermost course of this arroyo, which is canyon-like, is 

 called Kupifsi'i; see [25:40]. The jHusog.e^owsintoKup'iyj'hu^u 

 [21:11]. 



[24:2] Nambe Ilybahegi 'one-seeded juniper belts gulched' {hy, 'one- 

 seeded juniper' '.Juniperus monosperma'; 6a'a 'woman's belt', 

 probably here referring to belts of juniper; hegl 'gulched'). 



A large high area of broken land lying north of the central 

 course of the Uusoge is called thus. It is said that until a few 

 3'ears ago the northern line of the Nambe Pueblo land grant ran 

 through the JIibbaheg.1; now the line extends south of this place, 

 it is said. 



[24:3] Nambe Psetehti'u, see [22:35]. 



[24:4] Nambe Vekeliwu 'sharp fruit arroyo' {pe 'ripeness' 'ripe' 

 'fruit'; kc. 'sharpness' 'sharp', said, e. g., of cactus thorns; hiHu 

 'large groove' 'arroyo'). 



