BOLL. 30] 



TSETAAME TSIAMA 



825 



Diskaden.— Gatschet, Apache MS., B. A. E., 1883 

 (trans, 'group of Cottonwood trees'). 



Tsetaame (Tse-ta^-a-me). A former vil- 

 lage of the Chastacosta on tlie n. side of 

 Rogue r., e. of its junction with Applegate 

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

 in, 234, 1890. 



Tsetautkenne ('people against the 

 rocks' ). A division of the Sekani, resid- 

 ing about the k. base of the Rocky mts. , 

 N. of Peace r., chiefly around Ft St John, 

 Brit. Col. 



Cheta-ut-tinne. — Richardson, Arct. Exped., I, 180, 

 1851. 'Dtcheta-ta-ut-tunne. — Ibid. Tse-ta-hwo- 

 tqenne.— Morice, letter, B. A. E., 1890. Tse'-ta- 

 ut'qenne.— Morice in Trans. Can. Inst. 1893, 29, 1895. 



Tsetheshkizhni ( ' rocky pass ' ) . A Nav- 

 aho clan. 



Tse'jieckijni. — Matthews in Jour. Am. Folk-lore, 

 III, 104. 1890. Tse'deski'sni.— Matthews, Navaho 

 Legends, 31, 1897. 



Tsethkhani ('among the rocks'). A 

 Navaho clan. 



Tse'pqani. — Matthews in Jour. Am. Folk-lore, in, 

 104, 1890. Tse'ttani.— Matthews, Navaho Leg- 

 ends, 30, 1897. 



Tsetintunne( Ts' e-Un/ iiin^ ne) . Thehigh- 

 est of 4 former villages of the Tututni on 

 a stream emptying into Rogue r. near its 

 mouth, in Oregon. ^ — Dorsey in Jour. Am. 

 Folk-lore, iii, 236, 1890. 



Tsetlani ( Tse'ildm, ' bend in a canyon ' ) . 

 A Navaho clan. — Matthews, Navaho Leg- 

 ends, 29, 1897. 



Tsetsaa {Tse^tsaa). A gens of the 

 Koskimo, a Kwakiutl tribe. — Boas in 

 Rep. U. S. Nat. Mus. 1895, 329, 1897. 



Tsetsabus (a Twana name said to sig- 

 nify 'ancient capital'). A place near 

 Port Townsend, Wash., where nearly all 

 the Puget ISound Indians were said to 

 have occasionally met. (a. s. g.) 



Tsetsaut ( Ts'Ets'dhtt, 'people of the inte- 

 rior': Niska name). An Athapascan 

 band long settled among the Niska on 

 Portland canal, Alaska, reduced in 1895 

 to 12 individuals. They are a branch of 

 the western Nahane, speaking a dialect 

 similar to the Tahltan. This territory ex- 

 tended from Chunah r. to Observatory 

 inlet and northward to the watershed of 

 Iskoot r. About 18.30 they numbered 500, 

 but were practically exterminated by con- 

 tinued attacks of their kinsmen, the Lak- 

 weip, and of the Tlingit. They once 

 lived on Behin channel, and were friendly 

 with the Sanya until these determined to 

 kill them and enslave their women and 

 children, whereupon they migrated to 

 Portland channel and, when reduced in 

 numbers, fell under the control of the 

 Niska. See Boas in 10th Rep. N. W. 

 Tribes Can., 34, 1895, and in Jour. Am. 

 Folk-lore, ix, no. 4, 1896; x, no. 1, 1897. 



Tsetsetloalakemae ( Tsetse Lod' lag Emae, 

 'the famous ones' ). A gens of the Nim- 

 kish, a Kwakiutl tribe. — Boas in Rep. 

 U. S. Nat. Mus. 1895, 331, 1897. 



Tsetthim {Ts' e-V quit) . A Kuitsh village 



on lower Umpqua r., Oreg. — Dorsey in 

 Jour. Am. Folk-lore, in, 231, 1890. 



Tsetutkhlalenitun ( Tse-tuf'-qla-le-nV-tun). 

 A former village of the Chastacosta on the 

 N. side of Rogue r. , Oreg. — Dorsey in 

 Jour. Am. Folk-lore, iii, 234, 1890. 



Tsetuttunne {Ts'etut^ tunne, 'people 

 where the road is on the beach ' ) . A 

 former village of the Tututni on the coast 

 of Oregon, s. of Rogue r. — Dorsey in Jour. 

 Am. Folk-lore, iii, 236, 1890. 



Tsewenalding. A former Hupa village 

 on the E. side of Trinity r., near the mid- 

 dle of Hupa valley, n. Cal. Its inhab- 

 itants were driven from their homes in 

 1864 by the warriors of Takimilding vil- 

 lage, who obtained the aid of the military 

 then stationed at Ft Gaston, (p. e. g. ) 



Cemalton.— Ind. Aff. Rep. 1871, 682, 1872. OUe- 

 pot'l.— Gibbs, MS., B. A. E., 18.52 (Yurok nnme). 

 Sermalton.— Ind. Aff., Rep. 246, 1877. Tsewenal- 

 din. — Goddard, Life and Culture of the Hupa, 12, 

 1903. We-la-poth.— McKee (18.51) in Sen. Ex. 

 Doc. 4, 32d Cong., spec, sess., 194, 1853. Wi-la- 

 pusch.— Meyer, Nach dem Sacramento, 282, 1855. 



Tsewhitzen. A Clallam village formerly 

 on Port Angeles Spit, 2 or 3 m. w. of 

 Yinnis, Wash. In 1887 Eells stated that 

 about 35 Indians lived here. 

 Tse-hwit-zen.— Eells, letter, B. A. E., May 21, 1886. 

 Tse-whit-zen.— Gibbs in Pac. R. R. Rep., i, 429, 1855. 



Tseyanathoni ('horizontal water under 

 cliffs').^ A Navaho clan, now extinct. 

 Tse'yanafb'ni.— Matthews in Jour. Am. Folk-lore, 

 III, 104, 1890. Tse'yanafo'ni.— Matthews, Navaho 

 Legends, 30, 1897. 



Tseyikehe ('rocks standing near one 

 another ' ) . A Navaho clan. 

 Tse'yikehe. — Matthews in Jour. Am. Folk-lore. 

 Ill, 104, 1890. Tse'yikehe^iine.— Ibid. Tse'yike- 

 hedine'. — Matthews, Navaho Legends, 30, 1897. 



Tsezhinkini ( ' house of the black cliffs ' ) . 

 A Navaho clan. 



Tse 'dzinld'ni. — Matthews, Navaho Legends, 29, 

 1897. Tse'jinkini. — Matthews in Jour. Am. Folk- 

 lore, III, 103, 1890. 



Tsezhinthiai ('trap dyke'). A Navaho 

 clan 

 Tse'jinffiai. — Matthews in Jour. Am. Folk-lore, 



III, 103, 1890. Tse'jinj!iai)!iine.— Ibid. Tse'sin- 

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



Tshirege (Tewa: 'bird'). A large 

 prehistoric pueblo of the Tewa, built of 

 pumice and volcanic tufa, situated on the 

 N. edge of the great Mesa del Pajarito, 

 about 6 m. w. of the Rio Grande and 7 

 m. s. of San Ildefonso pueblo, n. N. Mex. 

 From this ruin the Pajarito ('Little 

 Bird') park receives its name. See 

 Hewett in Bull. 32, B. A. E., 1907. 

 Fajaro Pinto. — Bandelier in Arch. Inst. Papers, 



IV, 79, 1892. Pueblo of the Bird.— Bandelier, Delight 

 Makers, 378, 1890. Tchrega.— Hewett in Am. 

 Anthr., vi, 645, 1904. Tshirege.— Hewett in 

 Bull. 32, B. A. E., 23,1906. Tzi-re-ge.— Bandelier 

 in Arch. Inst. Papers, op. cit., 16. 



Tsiakhaus ( Tsi'-a-qaus' ) . A Kuitsh vil- 

 lage on lower Umpqua r., Oreg. — Dorsey 

 in Jour. Am. Folk-lore, iii- 231, 1890. 



Tsiama. A prehistoric pueblo of the 

 Acoma tribe, which, according to tradi- 

 tion, was inhabited during their migra- 

 tion from the mystic Shipapu in the in- 



