BULL. 30] 



SHUNGKAHANAPIN 8HUWALASHU 



561 



Ibid. Shonk-chun'-ga-dS.— Morgan, Anc. Soc, 157, 

 1877 



Shangkahanapin ('wears a dogskin 

 around the neck,' i. e. 'dog necklace') 

 A band of the Brule Teton Sioux. 

 Cunkaha-nap'i".— Dorsey (after Cleveland) in 15th 

 Rep. B. A. K., 219, 1897. Suijkaha napin.— Ibid. 



Shungkayuteshni ('eat no dogs'). A 

 band of t!ie Miniconjou Sioux. 



Cunka-yute-cni.— Dorsey in l.'ith Rep. B A. E., 220, 

 1897. Ho-tum'-mi'-hu-is.— Havden, Ethnog. and 

 Philol. Mo. Val., 290, 1862 (Cheyenne name). 

 Shunk'-a-yu-tesh'-ni. — Ibid., 876. Suijkayute-sni. — 

 Dorsey in 15th Rep. B. A. E., 220, 1897. Those that 

 eat no dogs. — Culbertson in Smithson. Rep. 1850, 

 142, 1851. 



Shunkukedi (named from an island 

 called Shan, 'old'). A Tlingit division 

 of the AVolf jjhratry, living at Klawak, 

 Alaska. The name of this clan is some- 

 times applied, in the form Shunkukedi- 

 na ( ' Shunkukedi nation ' ), to the entire 

 Wolf phratry. 



Ce'ngoqedi'na.—S wanton, field notes, B. A. E., 1904. 

 Schengo-kedi.— Krause, Tlinkit Ind., 116, 1885. 



Shup. A former Chumashan village 

 near Carpenteria, Santa Barbara co., Cal., 

 N. of EI Rincon. 



Cup.— Henshaw, S. Barbara MS. vocab., B. A. E., 

 1884 {c=sh). 



Shupauk. A former Yaquina village on 

 the s. side of Yaquina r., Oreg. 

 Cu'-dauk.— Dorse V in Jour. Am. Folk-lore, iii, 

 229, 1890(c=ii;i). ■ 



Shuqualak. A former Choctaw town 

 or division in Noxubee co., Miss. — Gat- 

 schet, Creek Migr. Leg., i, 109, 1884. 



Shurmuyu. The Turquoise clan of the 

 Tigua pueblo of Isleta, N. Mex. 



Shurmuyu-t'ainin. — Lummi.s quoted by Hodge in 

 Am. Anthr., ix, 3.52, 1896 {t'ainin^' people'). 



Shushuchi. A former Chumashan vil- 

 lage between Pt Conception and Santa 

 Barbara, Cal., in the locality now called 

 La Fuemada. 



Cu'-cu-tci.— Henshaw, Buenaventura MS. vocab., 

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



Shustak's Village. A camping place of a 

 Stikine chief named Shastaak (CActlaiVk), 

 on Etolinid., Alaska; pop. 38 in 1880. — 

 Petroff in 10th Census, Alaska, 32, 1884. 



Shuswap (strictly Sequa^pmnq). The 

 most important Salishan tribe of British 

 Columbia, formerly holding most of the 

 territory between the Columbia r. water- 

 shed and Fraser r., including the basin 

 of Thompson r. above Ashcroft, embrac- 

 ing Shushwap or Adams lakes, and ex- 

 tending N. to include Quesnel lake. They 

 now occupy a number of small village 

 reservations attached to the Kamloops- 

 Okanagan and W illiams Lake agencies, 

 together with a small band, descendants 

 of Chief Kinbasket, for about 60 years 

 past permanently settled among the 

 Kutenai. On the n. they border the Tsil- 

 kotin, an Athapascan tribe; on the s. and 

 w. the kindred Okanagan, Ntlakyapamuk, 

 and Lillooet. They have probably dwin- 

 dled at least one-half since the advent of 

 the miners in their country half a century 

 ago, but still number more than 2,100, in 



3456— Bull. 30, pt 2—07 36 



the following bands: Kamloops- Okanagan 

 Agency — Adams Lake, Ashcroft, Bona- 

 parte, Deadman's Creek, Kaudoops, Nes- 

 kainlith or Halaut, North Thompson, 

 Little Shushwap Lake, Spallunicheen; 

 ]VilUams Luke Agency — Alkali Lake, Canoe 

 Creek, Clinton, Dog Creek, Fountain (oc- 

 cupied chiefly by Lillooet), High Bar, 

 Pavilion, Soda Creek, Williams Lake; 

 Kootenay Agency — Kinbasket. 



Consult Dawson in Trans. Roy. Soc. 

 Canada, ix, sec. ii, 1892; TeitinMem. Am. 

 Mus. Nat. Hist., ii, Anthr. i, no. 4, 1900; 

 Ann. Rep. Can. Ind. Aff. ; Boas in 6th Rep. 

 N. W. Tribes Can., 1891. (.i. m.) 



Atenas.— Morse, Rep. to Sec. War, 371, 1822 (the 

 variants of this are from the Takulli word mean- 

 ing 'stranger'). Atnahs. — Gallatin in Trans. Am. 

 Antiq. Soc, ii, 16, 134, 1836. At-naks. — Mavne, 

 Brit. Col., 296, 1861. Atnans.— De Smet, Oregon 

 Miss., 100, 1847. Atnas.— Drake, Bk. Inds., vi, 

 1818. Clulwarp.— Fitzhugh in In<i. Aff. Rep. 1857, 

 328, 1858. Ka-la-muh,— Mackay quoted by Dawson 

 in Trans. Roy. Soc. Can., sec. ii, 7, 1891 ('the peo- 

 ple': own name). Schouchouaps. — DuflotdeMo- 

 fras, Oregon, ii, 337, 1844. Se-huapm-uh, — Mackay- 

 op. (it., 4. SeQuapmuQ. — Boas in 6th Rep. N. VV. 

 Tribes Can., 80, 1890. Shewhap.— Anderson quoted 

 by Gibb.s in Hist. Mag., vii, 77, 1863. Shewhap- 

 much. — Ibid., 73, 76. Shewhapmuh, — Tolmie and 

 Dawson, Vocabs. Brit. Col., 1'24b, 1884. Shewhap- 

 mukh. — Gibbs in Shea's Lib. Am. Ling., xi, vii, 

 1860-3. She- whaps.— Ross, Adventures, 151, 1849. 

 Shoo-schawp. — Kane, Wanderings, 155, 1859. 

 Shooshaps.— Parker, Journal, 299, 1840. Shoos- 

 wabs. — Taylor in Cal. Farmer, July 19, 1862. 

 Shoo-wha'-pa-mooh. — Daw.son in Trans. Roy. Soc. 

 Can., sec. II, 4, 1891. Shoushwaps. — Hale iii U. S. 

 Expl. Exped., VI, 198, 1S46. Sho r/apemoh.— De 

 Smet, Oregon Miss., 63, 1847. Shouwapemot. — Ibid., 

 100. Shushwaps.— Hale, op. cit. ,20.5, 1.S46. Shush- 

 wapumsh, — Ibid. Shuswap-much, — Mayno, Brit. 

 Col., 296, 1861. Shuswaps. — Ibid. Sioushwaps. — 

 De Smet, Oregon Miss., 137, 1847. Sockacheenum. — 

 Brit. Adm. Chart, no. 1917. Soushwaps.— Prich- 

 ard, Phvs. Hist., v, 427, 1847. Syua'pamuQ.— Boas 

 in 5th Rep. N. W. Tribes Can., 10, 1889. Su'Quap- 

 muQ.— Boas in 6th Rep. N. W. Tribes Can., 80, 1890. 

 Thompson river Indians. — Tavlor in Cal. Farmer 

 July 19, 1862. TlitkatEwu'intlat.— Boas in 5th 

 Rep. N. W. Tribes Can., 10, 1889 ('without shirts 

 and trousers ': Kutenai name). Towapummuk. — 

 Brit. Col. map, Ind. Aff., Victoria, 1872. 



Shuta. The extinct Crane clan of Sia 

 pueblo, N. Mex. 



Shu'ta.— Stevenson in 11th Rep. B. A. E., 19, 1894. 

 Shuta-hano. — Hodge in Am. Anthr., ix, 350, 1896 

 {hano = ' people'). 



Shutamul {Shu^-ia-mtd). A former 

 Nishinam village in the valley of Bear r., 

 which is the next stream n. of Sacramento, 

 Cal. 



Shootamool, — Powers in Overland Mo., xii, 22, 

 1874. Shu'-ta-mul. — Powers in Cont. N. A. Ethnol., 

 Ill, 316, 1877. 



Shutaunomanok. A Pomo village on 

 what is known as Buckingham id., in 

 lower Clear lake, Cal. 



Cho-tan-o-man-as. — Gibbs in Schoolcraft, Ind. 

 Tribes, in, 110, 1853. Shutaunomanok.— A. L. 

 Kroeber, inf'n, 1903 (name in Upper Clear Lake 

 dialect). 



Shuuk ('much water'. — ten Kate). A 

 (former?) Pima village on the Gila r. res., 

 s. Ariz. 



Shootk.— ten Kate quoted by Gatschet, MS., B. 

 A. E., 199, 1888. Shu-uk.— Dudlev in Ind. Aff. Rep. 

 1871, 58, 1872. 



Shuwalashu. A former Chumashan vii- 



