BULL. 30] 



NAKARORl KAKOMGILISALA 



13 



Nakarori ('many holes in the rocks'). 

 A small rancheria of the Tarahumare near 

 Norogachic, Chihuahua, Mexico. — Lum- 

 holtz, inf n, 1894. 



Nakasinena ('sagebrush people'). An 

 important division of the Arapaho, rang- 

 ing about the headwaters of the South 

 Platte in the region of Pike's Peak and 

 northward along the foot of Bighorn 

 mts. and on Powder r., in Colorado and 

 Wyoming. Although not the largest 

 division, they claimed to be the mother 

 people of the' Arapaho. They were com- 

 monly known to the whites as Northern 

 Arapaho and to the rest of the tribe as 

 Baachinena. See ArapaJto. (j. m. ) 



Ba'achinena.— Mooney in 14th Rep. B. A. E., 954, 

 18%. Baakuune'na"".— Kroeber in Bull. Am. Mus. 

 Nat. Hist., XVIII, 7, 1902 ('blood-soup men': S. 

 Arapaho name). Baa"tctiine'na. — Ibid, ('red- 

 willow men'). Na'kasine'na. — Miwney, op. cit. 

 Na-ka-si'-nin. — Hayden. Ethnog. and Philol. Mo. 

 Val.. 321, 1SG2. Nanabine^na".— Kroeber, op. cit. 

 (^'northern men'). Na"k'haa">seine'na°. — Ibid. 

 ( ' sagebrush men ' ) . Northern Arapaho, — Mooney, 

 op. cit. 



Nakatkhaitunne ('people of the village 

 above'). A former Tututni village on 

 the N. side of Rogue r., Oreg. 

 Na'-kat-qai'- iiiime. — Dorsey in Jour. Am. Folk- 

 lore, III, 233, 1890 (own name). Na'-kut-qe' 

 ;uime'. — Ibid. (Xaltunnetunne name.) 



Nakaydi (the name refers to the Mexi- 

 can mode of walking with toes turned 

 out; cf. oNaA-oO. A clan among the White 

 Mountain Apache, composed of descend- 

 ants of Mexican captives and their Apache 

 captors (Bourke in Jour. Am. Folk-lore, 

 HI, 114, 1890). They correspond to the 

 Nakai of the Navaho and the Tidendaye 

 of the Chiricahua. 



Nakeduts-hadai {Na q!e' chits .rd^da-i, 

 Cpeoi^le of the house that went away 

 discouraged'). A subdivision of the 

 Yaku-lanas, a great family of the Raven 

 clan of the Haida; probably the name 

 was taken from that of a house. — Swan- 

 ton, Cont. Haida, 272, 1905. 



Nakeduxo {Xakc''diLro). A summer vil- 

 lage of the Utkiavinmiut Eskimo in 

 Alaska. — Murdoch in 9th Rep. B. A. E., 

 83, 1892. 



Nakhituntunne {Xa-qV-tfm }{m^ni', 'peo- 

 ple at the two roads ' ) . A former village 

 of the Mishikhwutmetunne on Coquille 

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

 III, 232, 1890. 



Nakhochatnnne {Xa'-qo-tca junne). A 

 former village of the Mishikhwutmetunne 

 on Coquille r., Oreg. — Dorsey in Jour. 

 Am. Folk-lore, in, 232, 1890. 



Nakhopani ( ' brown streak, horizontal 

 on the ground'). A Navaho clan which 

 had its origin s. of Zufii pueblo, N. Mex., 

 near the salt lake called Naqopd by the 

 Navaho, whence the name. 

 NaAopani.— Matthews, Navaho Legends, 30, 1897. 

 Naqopani, — Matthews in Jour. Am. Folk-lore, in, 

 103, 1890. 



Nakhotodhanyadi {NaqotodfManyadi, 'al- 

 ligator people'). A Biloxi clan. — Dorsey 

 in 15th Rep. B. A. E., 243, 1897. 



Nakhpakhpa ( ' take down leggings ' ) . A 

 band of the Brule Teton Sioux. 

 Nahpahpa. — Dorsey in 15th Rep. B. A. E., 218, 

 1897. Naqpaqpa.-^Ibid. 



Nakhtskum. A Yurok village on lower 

 Klamath r. , between INIeta and Shregegon, 

 X. w. Cal. — A. L. Kroeber, inf'n, 1905. 



Nakila {Xa->ii'-la). Given as a former 

 Takelma village on the s. side of Rogue 

 r., Oreg., about 10 m. above Yaasittm. — 

 Dorsey in Jour. Am. Folk-lore, iii, 235, 

 1890. 



Nakkawinininiwak ('men of divers 

 races ' ). A mixed tribe of Cree and Chip- 

 pewa on Saskatchewan r., N. W. Ter., 

 Canada. 



Nakkawinininiwak. — Belcourt (ca. 1850) in Minn. 

 Hist. Soc. Coll., I, "227, 1872. Nakoukouhirinous.— 

 Bacqueville de la Potherie, Hist. Ani.,_i, 170, 1753. 



Naknahula {Xaxnd'xida, ? 'rising above 

 other tribes'). A gens of the Koekso- 

 tenok, a Kwakiutl tribe. — Boas in Rep. 

 Nat. Mus. 1895, 330, 1897. 



Nakoaik. A former Chinook town on 

 the s. side of Columbia r., Oreg. 



Naqoa'ix.— Boas, inf'n, 1905. Naxuaix. — Gatschet, 

 MS., B. A. E., 1877. 



Nakoaktok (Xd^q^oaqtdq, or Xa/k!wax'- 

 da^x", 'ten-gens tribe'). A Kwakiutl 

 tribe on Seymour inlet, Brit. Col,, with the 

 Gyeksem, Kwakokutl, Sisintlae, Tsitsi- 

 melekala, and "Walas gentes, according 

 to Boas. According to Dawson the win- 

 ter town of these people in 1885 was in 

 Blunden harbor, to which they had 

 moved from an older town, Kikwistok. 

 Their summer village was nained Mapa- 

 kum, and thej' had a fishing station called 

 Awuts. Pop. 104 in 1901, 90 in 1906. 

 Nahcoktaws.— Brit. Col. map, 1872. Nah-keoock- 

 to.— Boas in Bull. Am. Geog. Soc, '226, 1887. 

 Nah-keuch-to.— Sproat in Can Ind. Aff., 148, 1879. 

 Nah-knock-to.— Can. Ind. Aff. 1883, pt. l, 190, iaS4. 

 Nahkwoch-to. — Sproat, op. cit., 145. Nahwahta, — 

 Can. Ind. Aff., pt. ii, 166, 1901. Na'k'oartok'.— Boas 

 in 6th Rep. N. W. Tribes Can., 53, 1890. Nakok- 

 taws.— Brit. Col. map, 1872. Nakwahtoh. — Tolmie 

 and Dawson, Yocabs. Brit. Col., 118b, 18S4. Nak- 

 war«-"i.— Boas in Bull. Am. Geog. Soc, 226, 1887. 

 Na K:wax-da%>'. — Boas in Mem. Am. Mus. Nat. 

 Hist., V, pt. II, 3'22, 1902. Na'-kwok-to.— Dawson 

 in Trans. Roy. Soc Can., sec ii, 65, 1887. Na'q'- 

 oaqtoq.— Boas in Rep. Nat. Mus. 1895, 329, 1897. 

 Naqoartoq. — Boas in Petermanns Mitt., pt. 5, 130, 

 1887. Nar-kock-tau.— Kane, Wand, in N. A., app., 

 1859. Nuk wul tuh.— Tolmie and Dawson, op. cit., 

 119b. 



Nakolkavik. A Kuskwogmiut Eskimo 

 village on the left bank of Kuskokwim r., 

 near the mouth, Alaska. Pop. 193 in 

 1880. 



Nacholchavigamut. — Spurr and Post quoted by 

 Baker, Geog. Diet. Alaska, 1902. Naghaikhlaviga- 

 mute.— Petroff, Rep. on Alaska, map, ]S84. Na- 

 ghikhlavigamute. — Ibid., 17. Nakolkavik. — Baker, 

 op. cit. 



Nakomgilisala {Xaqo'mg'Uisala, 'al- 

 ways staying in their country ' ) . A Kwa- 

 kiutl tribe which formerly lived at C. 

 Scott, at the n. end of Vancouver id., but 

 has since moved to Hope id., farthers. 

 This and the Tlatlasikoala together re- 

 ceive the name of Nawiti from the whites. 

 The two tribes numbered 73 in 1897. The 

 Nakomgilisala gentes are Gyeksem and 

 Naenshya. 



