552 



SHIPOLOLONKAIA SHLALKI 



[b. a. e. 



cit., 14. Shu-par-la-vayi — Irvine in Ind. Aff. Rep., 

 160, 1877. Shupaulavi.— Voth, Traditions of the 

 Hopi, 61, 1905. Shupowla. — Bourke misquoted by 

 Donaldson, op. cit., 14. Shupowlewy. — Bourke, 

 Moquia of Ariz. 226, 1884. Suponolevy. — Bourke 

 in Proc. Am. Antiq. Soc., n. s., i, 244, 1882. 

 Supowolewy,— Bourke, Moquis of Ariz., 136, 1884. 

 Tse-itso-kit'-bit-si'-li — Stephen, MS., B. A. E., 

 1879 ('miserable dwellings at': Navaho name). 

 Waki.— Voth, Traditions of the Hopi, 61, 1905 

 (former name; sig. ' refuge house ' ) . Xipaolabi.— 

 Dominguez and Escalante (1776) in Doc. Hist. 

 Mex.,2ds., I, 548, 1854. 



SMpololonkaia {Shi-po-lo-lon JCai-a, 

 'place of misty waters' ). The traditional 

 fourth resting place of the Zuni on their 

 eastward migration. — Gushing in Mill- 

 stone, IX, 2, Jan. 1884. 



Shiptetza (correctly Shiptatse, referring 

 to the glancing of an arrow when it strikes 

 a buffalo's ribs. — Curtis). A band of the 

 Crow tribe. 



Bear's Paw Mountain. — Morgan, Anc. Soc, 1-59, 

 1877. Shiptatse.— Curtis, N. Am. Ind., IV, 38, 45^ 

 1909. Ship-tet-sa. — Culbertson in Smithson. Rep. 

 1850, 144, 1851. Ship-tet'-za.— Morgan, op. cit. 



Shishaiokoi [C'lcaVdQoi). A Squaw- 

 mish village community on the e. coast 

 of Howe sd., Brit. Col.— Hill-Tout in 

 Eep. Brit. A. A. S., 474, 1900. 



Shishalap {Shi-shd^-ldp). TwoChuma- 

 shan villages: one formerly between Pt 

 Conception and Santa Barbara, Cal., in 

 the locality now called El Cajo Viejo; the 

 other near San Buenaventura, Ventura 

 CO., at a place later called Frente de la 

 Calle de Fezueroa. 



Chichilop.— Taylor in Cal. Farmer, July 24, 1863. 

 Ci-ca'-lap. — Henshaw, Buenaventura MS. vocab., 

 B. A. E., 1884 (c=sh). 



Shishlamau ( Cic-ld-md'-u, pron. Shish-ld- 

 md^-u). A Chumashan village formerly ex- 

 isting near Hueneme, Ventura co., Cal. — 

 Henshaw, Buenaventura MS. vocab., B. 



A. E., 1884. 



Shishmaref (after Lieut. Shishmaref, 

 who accompanied Kotzebue in 1816). A 

 Kinugumiut Eskimo village at Shishmaref 

 cape, Alaska. — Post-route map, 1903. 



Shitaimu. A former pueblo of the 

 Eagle clan of the Hopi, situated on the 

 summit of a large mound e. of Mishong- 

 novi, Arizona, where traces of numerous 

 small-roomed houses are found. The 

 uneven summit of the mound is about 

 300 by 200 ft, and the village seems to 

 have been built in the form of an irregu- 

 lar ellipse, but the ground-plan is very 

 obscure. 

 Shi-tai-mu. — Stephen and Mindeleff in 8th Rep. 



B. A. E., 28, 1891. Shitaimuvi.— Mindeleff, ibid., 

 48. Shitaumu.— Fewkes in 17th Rep. B. A. E., 581, 

 1898. 



Shiu. The Eagle clan of Isleta pueblo, 

 N. Mex. 



Shiu-t'ainin.— Lummis quoted by Hodge in Am. 

 Anthr., ix, 350, 1896 (<'aintn=' people'). 



Shiuguermi. A Costanoan village 

 situated in 1819 within 10 m. of Santa 

 Cruz mission, Cal. — Taylor in Cal. Far- 

 mer, Apr. 5, 1860. 



Shiuwauk ( CV-u-wa^-Hk ) . An Alsea vil- 

 lage on the N. side of Alsea r., Oreg. — 



Dorsey in Jour. Am. Folk-lore, in, 230, 

 1890. 



Shivwits. A Paiute tribe formerly in- 

 habiting the plateau bearing their name 

 in N. w. Arizona, and numbering 182 in 

 1873. There are now (1909) 118 Shiv- 

 wits in the s. w. corner of Utah, near St 

 George, where they have about 70 acres 

 of tillable land, with adjacent land suit- 

 able for pasturage, while others are said 

 to be on the Moapa res. in Nevada. 

 Cehmeque-sabinta.— Cortez (1799) in Pac. R. R. 

 Rep., Ill, pt. 3, 126, 1856. Chemeguabas Sevintas.— 

 Garc(5s (1776) , Diary, 472, 1900. Chemegue-sevicta.— 

 Orozco y Berra, Geog., 59, 1864. Chemegue Se- 

 vinta.— Garc6s, op. cit., 444. Chevet.— Arricivita 

 quoted by Bancroft, Nat. Races, iii, 686, 1882. 

 Kohoaldje. — Kroeber in Univ. Cal. Pub., Am. 

 Archaeol. and Ethnol., vi, 107, 1907 (Mohave 

 name). lee-Biches.— Beadle, Undeveloped West, 

 658, 1873. Faraniikh. — Kroeber, op. cit. (Cheme- 

 huevi name). Savints.— Hinton, Handbook to 

 Arizona, 353, 1878. Seviches.— Hoffman in 10th 

 Rep.HaydenSurv., 461, 1878. Sevinta.— Escudero, 

 Not. Estad. de Chihuahua, 228, 1834. Sheav- 

 wits.— Powell and Ingalls in Ind. Aflf. Rep. 1873, 

 42, 50, 1874. Sherwits.— Ingalls in H. R. Ex. Doc. 

 66, 42dCong.,3d sess., 2, 1873. Shi'-vwits.— Powell 

 and Ingalls, op. cit., 50. Sivinte. — Kroeber, op. 

 cit. (another Mohave name). Sivits. — Ibid, 

 (another Chemehuevi name). Virgin River Pai- 

 utes,— Ibid. 



Shiwanu. The Ant clan of the Ala 

 (Horn) phratry of the Hopi. 

 Ci'-wa-nii wiin-wii. — Fewkes in Am. Anthr., vii, 

 401, 1894 {wun-ivu=e\a.n), 



Shiyosubula ('sharp -tailed grouse'). 

 A band of the Brul6 Teton Sioux. 

 Ciyo-subula.— Dorsey in 15th Rep. B. A. E., 218, 

 1897. Siyo-subula.— Ibid. 



Shiyotanka ('prairie chicken'). A 

 band of the Brule Teton Sioux. 

 Ciyo-tanka.— Dor.sey in 15th Rep. B. A. E., 218, 

 1897. Pheasants.— "Culbertson in Smithson. Rep. 

 1850, 141, 1851. Siyo-tagka. — Dorsey, op. cit. 



Shkagech {CgdgEtc, 'her nose'). A 

 former village of the Tlakluit on Colum- 

 bia r., Wash. (e. s. ) 



Shkanatulu. The extinct Lizard clan of 

 the pueblo of Sia, N. Mex. 

 Shkanatulu-hano. — Hodge in Am. Anthr., ix, 351, 

 1896 (/)«»o=' people'). 



Shkashtun [Ckac^-t'Cin). A Takelma 

 band or village on the s. side of Rogue r., 

 Oreg., between Hashkushtun and Leaf 

 cr. — Dorsey in Jour. Am. Folk-lore, iii, 

 235, 1890. 



Shkonana ( Cq.'o'nana) . A former vil- 

 lage of the Tlakluit opposite Crates Point 

 on Columbia r., Wash. (_e. s.) 



Shkuet {Ckuet). A village of the 

 Ntlakyapamuk on Eraser r., near Spuz- 

 zum, Brit.Col.— Hill-ToutinRep. Ethnol. 

 Surv. Can., 5, 1899. 



Shkuokem {Ckud'kEm, 'little hills'). A 

 village of the Ntlakyapamuk on Fraser 

 r., above Spuzzum, Brit. Col. — Hill-Tout 

 in Rep. Ethnol. Surv. Can., 5, 1899. 



Shkutch ( Ckutc). A former Siuslaw vil- 

 lage on Siuslaw r. , Oreg. ^Dorsey in Jour. 

 Am. Folk-lore, iri, 230, 1890. 



Shlalki {Cld'lki). An insignificant 

 Chilliwack village in s. British Colum- 

 bia—Hill-Tout in Rep. Ethnol. Surv. 

 Can., 4, 1902. 



