836 



TULIK TUMACACORI 



Lb. a. e. 



•water,' 'liquid,' referring to the watery 

 flesh of this fish. (a. f. c. ) 



Tulik (A-leut: 'fissure'). An Aleut 

 village formerly on Umnak, Aleutian ids. , 

 Alaska, situated near a volcano of the 

 same name. Pop. 26 in 1834. 

 Tooleekskoi.— Elliott, Cond. Aff. Alaska, 225, 1875. 

 Tulik.— Holmberier, Ethnol. Skizz., 142, 1855. Tu- 

 linskoe.— Veniamlnof, Zapiski, ii, 202, 1840. 



Tulkepaia (Yuman: Tulkepaia venuna 

 tcheluvale, probably meaning 'spotted- 

 belly sparrows. ' — Corbusier). A body of 

 Yuman Indians, popularly known as 

 Apache Yumas, said by Corbusier ( 1886) 

 to have recently sprung from a mixture 

 of Yuma, Mohave, antl Yavapai. They 

 claimed as their home the desert stretch 

 of w. Arizona between the Colorado r. 

 and the country of the Yavapai, over 

 which they roamed until placed on the 

 Rio Verde res., Ariz., in May, 1873. In 

 1875 most of these, mmibering in all 

 about 500, were removed to the San Car- 

 los res., where they numbered 352 in the 

 following year. They speak the Yavapai 

 dialect with a few "lexical differences. 

 See Tontos. (a. s. G.) 



Apache Yuma.— White, MS. Hist. Apaches, B. A.E., 

 1875. Dil-zhays. — Ibid. Go'hun.— Ibid. Har-dil- 

 zhays.— Ibid. (■ Red country Indians'; 'Indians 

 living- where there are red ants': Apache 

 name). Hatilshe.— White in Zeitschr. f. Ethnol., 

 370, 1877 (the Tonto, Yuma, and Mohave, so- 

 called by the Apache). Ko-paya.— White quoted 

 by Gatsc'het Yuma-Sprachstamm, 370, 1877 (own 

 name, abbreviation of Tnlke-pAya). Ko-uavi. — 

 Gatschet, ibid, (own name). Ko'un.— White, MS. 

 Hist. Apaches, op. cit. Kowavi. — Gatschet, op. 

 cit. Kuhn.— White, MS. Hist., op. cit. (so-called 

 by Mexicans). Kiin. — Ibid. Natchon. — Corbusier 

 misquoted by Shvifeldt, Ind. Types of Beauty, 17, 

 1891. Natchous.— Corbusier in Am. Antiq., Vlll, 

 276, 1886 ('lizard': Apache name). Quejuen.— 

 Froebel, Seven Years' Travel, 511, 1859. Toleko- 

 paya. — White quoted by Gatschet, op. cit., 411. 

 Tolgopeya.— Ibid. Tolkepaya.— ten Kate, Reizen 

 in N. A., 199, 1885. Tolkipeya.— White quoted 

 by Gatschet, op. cit., 371. Tolkopaya.— Ibid. 

 Tsilgopaya. — Ibid. Tsilgopeya.— Ibid. Tulkepaia 

 venuna tchehwale.— Cdrbusier, op. cit. (= spotted 

 belly T.) . Tubkapay^. -Harrington in Jour. Am. 

 Folk-lore, xxi, 324, 1908 ('lizard folk': given as 

 Tonto name for themselves). Ya-ve-pe'-Ku-tcan'.— 

 ten Kate, Synonymie, 5, 1884 (given as their own 

 name). 



Tullibee. See Tulihee. 



TuUihas. A village situated in 1755 on 

 the w. branch of Muskingum r., Ohio, 

 about 20 m. above the forks, and occu- 

 pied by Delawares, Mahican, andCaugh- 

 nawaga. — Smith (1799) quoted by Drake, 

 Trag. Wild., 185, 1841. 



Tulomos. Mentioned as a tribe or divi- 

 sion of the Costanoan Indians, probably 

 inhabiting the peninsula of San Fran- 

 cisco, Cal., and connected with the mis- 

 sion of Dolores. Together with the 

 Olhones, Ahwastes, Altahmos, and 

 Romonans they have been called Costa- 

 nos. (a. l. K.) 



Tu-lo-mos.— Schoolcraft, Ind. Tribes, ii, 506, 1852. 

 Tulumonos. — Latham in Proc. Philol. Soc. Lond., 

 79, 18.52-5:^. Tuolomos.— Taylor in Cal. Farmer, 

 Jan. 11, 1861. 



Tulpkweyu (contr. from tarnpkweye-u, a 



species of snake). A Tonkawa gens. — 

 Gatschet, Tonkawe vocab., B. A. E., 1884. 



Tulsa (properly Taisi, contracted from 

 TaUahnssee) . A Creek town on the left 

 bank of Arkansas r. , in tp. 19 n. , R. 1 2 e. , 

 Okla. See Gatschet, Creek Migr. Leg., 

 II, 186, 1888. 



Tulsa. A Creek town at the old Creek 

 council-ground, at Council Hill, near the 

 head of Grave cr., in the s. e. part of the 

 Creek Nation, Okla.— Gatschet, Creek 

 Migr. Leg., ii, 186, 1888. 

 Lutchapoga. — Gatschet, ibid., 185. 



Tulshk. A Yaquina village on the s. 

 side of Yaquina r., Oreg. 

 T'ulck.— Dorsey in Jour. Am. Folk-lore, in, 229, 

 1890 (r = .v/i). 



Tulsulsun ( Tul-s{iV-SHn) . Given by Dor- 

 sey (Jour. Am. Folk-lore, in, 235, 1890) 

 as a Takelma band or village in Oregon, 

 but identified by Sapir (Am. Anthr., ix, 

 254, 1907) as merely the Takelma name 

 {DahaMi}) of Illinois r. 



Tultschina ('bathers in cold water'). 

 A Knaiakhotana clan of Cook inlet, 

 Alaska. — Richardson, Arct. Expd., i, 

 407, 1851. 



Tuluka. A former Patwin village in 

 Pope valley, Napa co., Cal. According 

 to Powers the Spaniards carried away 

 most of the tribe in 1838 to Sonoma mis- 

 sion, where the larger portion soon died 

 from smallpox. There were only 3 sur- 

 vivors in 1842. 



Re'-ho.— Powers in Cont. N. A. Ethnol., in, 228, 

 1877 (named from a chief). Tulkays.— Taylor in 

 Cal. Farmer, Mar. 30, 1860. Tu-lo-kai'-di-sel.— 

 Powers, op. cit. Tuluka.— S. A. Barrett, inf 'n, 1905. 



Tuluka. A Kuskwogmiut Eskimo vil- 

 lage on the right bank of Kuskokwim r., 

 Alaska; pop. 59 in 1880, 17 in 1890. 

 Toolooka-anabamute.— Petroff in 10th Census, 

 Alaska, 16, 1SS4. Tooluka-anahamute.— Ibid., map. 

 Tulukagnagamiut. — 11th Census, Alaska, 164, 1893. 



Tuluksak. A Kuskwogmiut Eskimo 

 village on the left bank of Kuskokwim r., 

 Alaska, 40 m. above Bethel; pop. 150 in 

 1880, 62 in 1890. 



lulukiak.— Hallock in Nat. Geog. Mag., ix. 90, 1898 

 (misprint). Toulaksagamut.— Spurr (1898) quoted 

 bv Baker, Geoi;. Diet. Alaska, 1902. Tuluksag- 

 miut.— 11th Census, Alaska, 164, 1893. 



Tulwutmetunne ('people in the open 

 prairie'). A band of the Mishikhwut- 

 metunne formerly residing on Coquille r., 



Oreg. 



Xul-wut'-me.— Dorsey in Jour. Am. Folk-lore, in, 



232, 1890. x"l' ■^fit"™^' ^unne'.- ibid. 



Tumac. Said to be the westernmost 

 settlement of the Maricopa on Gila r., 

 s. w. Ariz., in the 18th century. — Orozco 

 y Berra, Geog., 348, 1S()4. 



Tumacacori (from Pima Tsu-ma-Tca'~ 

 hork, 'curved peak.' — ten Kate). A 

 former rancheria of one of the Piman 

 tribes, probably Sobaipuri, on Rio Santa 

 Cruz, s. of Tubac and 8 leagues n. n. w. of 

 Guevavi, s. Arizona. It was visited by 

 Father Kino in 1697-1701, and afterward 

 became a visifa of Guevavi, with 199 

 natives in 1764-67, and 39 in 1772, at 



