BULL. 30] 



TUKLUKYET TULIBEE 



835 



lage on Kuskokwim r. below the Yukon 

 pottage, Alaska; pop. 92 in 1880. 

 Tookhlagamute. — Petrott'inlOtli Census, Alaska, 17, 

 1SS4. Touckagnokmiut.— Zagoskin in Nouv. Ann. 

 Voy., 5th s., XXI, map, 18.i0. 



Tuklukyet. A Yukonikhotana village, 

 on the N. bank of Yukon r., 15 m. below 

 the mouth of Tozi r., Alaska. — Baker, 

 Geog. Diet. Alaska, 1902. 



Tukpafka ('punk-wood,' 'tinder'). An 

 upper Creek village, from which Niuyaka 

 was settled in 1777. According to Haw- 

 kins it was on Chattahoochee r., prob- 

 ably iti w. Georgia, in 1777. It contaitied 

 126familiesinl832. Whipple (Pac. R. R. 

 Rep., Ill, pt. 3, 8, 1856) speaks of a rem- 

 natit of the people as living with the 

 Kichai and Kickapoo on Canadian r., 

 Ind. T. (Oklahoma), in 1853. 

 Punknot. — Weatherford (1793) in Am. State Papers, 

 Ind. Aff., I, 385, 1832. Toak paf car.— Census of 

 1832 in Schoolcraft, Ind. Tribes, iv, 578, 1854. 

 Topofkies.— Domenech, Deserts N.A., I. 444, 1860. 

 Toprofkies.— Jacob, Lit'eof P. Gass, 121, 1859. Tote- 

 pauf-cau.— Hawkins (1799), Sketch, 45, 1848. Tuc- 

 pauska. — Bartram, Trav., 402, 1773. 



Tukpafka. A town of the Creek Na- 

 tion, on Canadian r., about 8 m. below 

 the mouth of Little r., Okla. 

 Topofkees.— Whipple in Pac.R. R. Rep., in, pt. 3, 

 8, 1856. Tukpafka.— Gatschet, Creek Migr. Leg., 

 n, 186, 1888. 



Tukuarika ('sheep-eaters,' referring to 

 the mountain sheep ). A division of Sho- 

 shoni said to have Uved in Yellowstone 

 park, subsequently in w. central Idaho on 

 the Lemhi fork of Salmon r., and on the 

 Malade. They were subsequently on the 

 Lemhi res., Idaho, but in 1907 they were 

 removed to the Ft Hall res. They num- 

 bered 90 in 1904, but are no longer sep- 

 arately enumerated. 



Great Kammas Indians. — Valkenburgh in Ind. Aff. 

 Rep., 235, 1865. Kammas Prairie tribe.— Coolev, 

 ibid., 30. Loo-coo-rekah.— Mann, ibid., 1864, 172, 

 1865. Mountain-Sheep-Eaters. — Hoffman in Proc. 

 Am. I'hilos. .^oc, xxiii, 297, 1886. Salmon River 

 Snakes.— Stnart, Montana, 81, 1865. Sheep-Eat- 

 ers.— Doty in Ind. Aff. Rep. 1864, 175, 1865. Too- 

 eoo recah. — (iebow, Sho-sho-nay Vocab., 19, 1868 

 (Shoshoni name). Took'-a-rik-kah.— Stnart, op. 

 cit. Tucaricas.— U. S. *tat. at Large, xvi, 346, 1878. 

 Tuka-rika.— Gatschet in Geog. Snrv. W. 100th Mer., 

 VII, 410, 1879. Tu'kuari'ka— Hoffman, op. cit. 



Tukulitlatun. A former village of the 

 Chastacosta on the N. side of Rogue r., 

 Greg. 



Tu'-:iu-nt-la'-tiin. — Dorsev in Jour. Am. Folk-lore, 

 III, 234, 1890. 



Tukutnut. A former village of the 

 Rumseu division of the Costanoan family 

 near Monterey, Cal. 



Santa Teresea.— Taylor in Cal. Farmer, Apr. 20, 

 1860 (misprint for Santa Teresa). Tucutnut.— 

 Ibid. 



Tukwilisitunne. A former village of the 

 Cha.'^tacosta on the n. side of Rogue r., 

 ( )reg. 



Tu'-kwi-li-si' ^iinne'. — Dorsey in Jour. Am. Folk- 

 lore, III, 234, 1890. 



Tula. A province, probably in w. 

 Arkansas, on Arkansas r., visited by 

 De Soto's army in 1542. As the language 

 differed from that of the Quapaw to the 



E., the people were possibly of the Cad- 



doan stock. 



Tula.— Biedma (1544) in French, Hist. Col], La., 



II, 106, 1850. TuUa.— Gentl. of Elvas (1657), ibid.. 



179. 



Tuladi. See Touladi. 



Tulalip. One of three divisions of the 

 Twana, a Salish tribe on the av. side of 

 Hood canal, Wash. This branch, accord- 

 ing to Eells, lives on a small stream, near 

 the head of the canal, called Dulaylip. 

 The name has also been given to a reserva- 

 tion on the w. side of Puget sd. 

 Do'hleli'p.— Eells, MS., B. A. E. (Twana name). 

 Du-hle-lips.— Eells in Smithson. Rep. 1887, 605, 

 1889. Kuhiyup.— Eolls, MS., op. cit. (Clallam 

 name). Teelalup.— Hill in H. R. Ex. Doc. 37, 34th 

 Cong., 3d sess., 81, 1857. Thwle-liip.— JlcCaw, Pu- 

 yallup MS. vocab., B. A. E., 1885 (Puvallnp 

 name). Tulalip.— Ind. Aff. Rep. 1901, 704, 1902 

 (name of res. and agency) . 



TulareSos (Span. : ' those of the tulares,' 

 or tracts of land containing tides or 

 reeds). A term applied loosely to the 

 tribes of the great valley of San Joa- 

 quin r. and Tulare lake, and even of 

 lower Sacramento valley, Cal. As thia 

 territory included Moquelumnan, Yo- 

 kuts (Mariposan), and Shoshonean tribes, 

 the word is without ethnic significance. 

 Until July 20, 1903, there was a "Mis- 

 sion-Tule River Consolidated Agency" 

 in California, when, by order of the Sec- 

 retary of the Interior, it was subdivided, 

 part becoming the Mission res. (with 

 2,897 Indians in 1908), the other the Tule 

 River res. (with 151 Indians). 

 Talarenos.— Mayer, Mexico, II, 38, 1853. Toolee- 

 rayos.— Beechey, Voy., I, 381, 1831. Tula.— 

 Emmons in Schoolcraft, Ind. Tribes, in, 201, 1853. 

 Tulara. — Ibid. Tulare Lake Indians. — Johnston in 

 Sen. Ex. Doc. 61, 32d Cong., 1st sess., 23, 1852. 

 Tularenos.— Duflot de Mufras, Expl., ii, 335, 1844. 

 Tulare River Indians.— Henley in Ind. Aff. Rep., 

 511, 1854. Tularesin.— Capron, Hi.«t. Cal., 20, 1854. 

 Tule River.— Ind. xVff. Rep. 1901, 686, 1902. Tulu- 

 raios. — Beechey, op. cit., ii, 401, 1831. Yutas 

 Talarenos. — Miihlenpfordt, Mejico, II, 538, 1844 

 (the Paiute living on the .streams s. of Tulare lake; 

 misprint). 



Tulares. A band, probably of the 01a- 

 mentke, formerly living on the n. coast 

 of San Francisco bay, Cal., but nearly ex- 

 tinct in 1853. — Gibbs in Schoolcraft, "ind. 

 Tribes, iii, 421, 1853. 



Tule River Reservation. A reservation 

 of 48,551 acres of partly arable land occu- 

 pied by 151 Mission Indians of various 

 tribes under the Tule River school super- 

 intendent, s. Cal. 



Tulibee. A species of whitefish ( Core- 

 gorius tullihee) of the Great Lakes and the 

 waters of theCanadianN. W., themongrel 

 whitefish. The Canadian-French form 

 of the word, which came into English as 

 tulibee, or inUibee, from N. w. Canatla, is 

 toulibi, representing the otonabi of the 

 Cree-Chippewa dialects of Algonquian, 

 with the well-known interchange of n 

 and I and the dropping of the first syl- 

 lable. The word signifies literally 'mouth 

 water,' from oton, 'its mouth,' and ahi, 



