546 ETHNOGEOGEAPHY OF THE TEWA INDIANS [eth. ANN. 29 



[29:120] (1) Acomii "Spi-nat".> 



(2) Eno-. Mount Ta^'lor. This is the current Eng. name, be- 

 stowed in honor of General Zacharj' Taylor. "Taylor Peak".^ 



(3) Span. Sierra de San Mateo 'Saint Matthew Mountain'. 

 This name appears to have been applied since early times. 



This mountain is 11,389 feet high according to the United States 

 Geological Survey.^ It can be seen from points t\vo or three 

 hundred miles away. It is said to be one of the cardinal moun- 

 tains of the Navaho. 

 [29:121] (1) Eng. Cabezon settlement. (<Span.). =Span. (2). 



(2) Span. Cabezon, name of the mesa [29:126], q. v. 

 [29:122] Wagon bridge across the Rio Grande a short distance north 



of Bernalillo [29:96]. See [29:97], [29:9s], [29:123]. 

 [29:123] Nameless pueblo ruin. 



"Where the church and the school of the Christian Brothers at 

 Bernalillo now stand, vestiges of a former pueblo which had been 

 destroyed by fire were exhumed; also metates, skeletons, and jars 

 filled with corn-meal".* The Roman Catholic church and school 

 of the Christian Brothers are north of Bernalillo at the junction 

 of the road which crosses the Rio Grande by way of the wagon 

 bridge [29:122] with the main highway up the east side of the Rio 

 Grande Valley. See [29:9(;], [29:97], ]29:98], [29:1»',»]. [29:122]. 

 [29:121] (1) Eng." ChiliU settlement. (<Span.). = Span. (2). 



(2) Span. Chilili, called after the pueblo ruin [29:105]. = Eng. 

 (1). See first paragraph of quotation fiom Bandelier under 

 [29:10.5], (1); also [29:105] and Chilili Arroyo [29:unlopated]. 

 [29:125] (1) Eng. Tajique settlement. (<Span.). =Span. (2). 



(2) Span. Tajique, named after the pueblo ruin [29:l<t6]. 

 = Eng. (1). 



The village of Tajique, about 15 miles south of Chilili [29:124] . . 

 The situation of Tajique is similar to that of Chilili — a small valley open to 

 the east and rising in the west. The ruins of the former pueblo [29:105] bor- 

 der upon the present settlement on the north and west, lying on tlie south 

 bank of the Arroyo of Tajique [Tajique Arroyo [29:unlocated]], which is here 

 a permanent, though very modest stream.' 



See [29:106] and Tajique Arroyo [29:unloeated]. 

 [29:126] (1) Isleta "Tchi'kugienad'':" given as the name of "Sierra 

 Cabezon near R. Puerco [29:111]". 



(2) Jemez Wdsemq''(j, of obscure etymology. 



> Bandelier, Final Report, pt. Ti, p. 30.5, 18fl2. 



-V. S. Geogr. Surveys West of the 100th Meridiiui, part of Central X. Slex., atlas sheet No. 77, 

 Exped. of 1873, '74, '75, '76, '77, and '78. 

 3 Gannelt, Dictionary of Altitudes, 4th ed., p. 6nl, 1906. 

 i Bandelier, op. cit., p. 230. 

 6 Ibid., p.2.o7. 

 « Isleta MS. vocab. in possession of Bureau of American Ethnology. 



