BULL. 30J 



TZETSESKADN UCHEAN FAMILY 



861 



volcanic rock and rubble, and probably 

 sheltered 500 people. It had evidently 

 been destroyed by tire, and, with anumber 

 of other pueblos in this region that appear 

 to have met a similar fate, is commonly 

 known by the Spanish name Pueblo Que- 

 mado, ' burnt village. ' According to Bau- 

 delier (Arch. Inst. Papers, iv, 95 et seq., 

 1892) it isnotknown whether this village 

 wasabandoned prior to the 1 6th century ; it 

 may have been the Pueblo Quemado men- 

 tioned by Ofiate in 1598, but as the remains 

 of a prehistoric Tano or Tewa village 6 

 m. s. w. of Santa Fc were known by the 

 same name, pi tssibly the latter was the vil- 

 lage referred to. 



El Pueblo ftuemado. — Bandelier, op. cit., 96- 

 _Popolo Bruciato. — Columbus Mem. Vol., 155, 1893 

 " (Italian form ). Pueblo quemado. — Ofiate (1598) in 

 Doc. IiK'd., XVI, 114, 1871 (possibly identical). 



Tzetseskadn ('top-of-hill people'). An 

 Apache band or clan at San Carlos agency 

 and Ft Apache, Ariz., in 1881 (Bourke in 

 Jour. Am. Folk-lore, in, 112, 1890); cor- 

 responding to the Bithani of the Navaho. 

 Sid-is-kine.— White, Apache Names of Ind. Tribes, 

 MS., B. A. F.. (trans, 'red dirt' or 'red rocks'). 

 Tze-tzes-kadu. — Bourke, op. cit. 



Tziltadin ( 'mountain slope'). A band 

 or clan of the Pinal Coyoteros at San Car- 

 los agency, Ariz., in 1881 (Bourke in 

 Jour. Am. Folk-lore, in, 114, 1890). It 

 corresponds to theTsiltaden (q.v.) of the 

 Chiricahua Apache. 



Tzintzilcliutzikadn ( ' acorn ' ) . An Apa- 

 che band or clan at San Carlos agency 

 and Ft Apache, Ariz., in 1881. — Bourke 

 in Jour. Am. Folk-lore, in, 111, 1890. 



Tziseketzillan ( ' twin peaks ' ) . An Apa- 

 che band or clan at San Carlos agency 

 and Ft Apache, Ariz., in 1881. 

 Tzis-eque-tzillan. — Bourke in Jour. Am. Folk-lore, 

 HI, ^V2, l.S9l(. 



Tzlanapah ("plenty of water'). An 

 Apache band or clan at San Carlos and 

 Ft Apache agency, Ariz., in 1881. Ac- 

 cording to Bourke (Jour. Am. Folk-lore, 

 III, 111, 1890) the name is one of the arbi- 

 trary variants of "Tusayan," tlie native 

 name adopted by the Spaniards for the 

 Hopi country, and still used; but Bourke 

 is prol)al)ly in error. 



Clin'-ar-par.— White, Apache Names of Ind. Tribes, 

 MS., B. .V. E. Sla-na-pa. — Bourke in ,lour. Am. 

 Folk-lore, ni, TJC, 1890. Tu-sahn.— Ibid. Tusa- 

 yan.— Ibid. Tu-sla. — Ibid. Tu-sla-na-pa. — Ibid. 

 Tu-slan-go.— Ibid. 



Tzolgan ('white mountain ' ).. An Apa- 

 che band or clan at San Carlos agency 

 and Ft Apache, Ariz., in 1881. — Bourke 

 in Jour. Am. Folk-lore, in. 111, 1890. 



Tzues. A Makah village 4 m. s. of 

 Waatch, n. w. Washington; pop. 99 in 

 1863. 



Tsoo-Yess.— U. S. Ind. Treat., 461, 1873. Tsuess.— 

 Swan in Smithson. Cont., xvi, 6, 1870. Tsu-yess. — 

 Gibbsin Cont. N. A. Ethnol., i, 173, 1877. 



Uacazil ('sandy cave'). A rancheria, 

 probably Cochimi, under Purisima 

 (Cadegomo) mission, s. Lower California, 



in the 18th centurv. — Doc. Hist. Mex., 

 4th s., V, 188, 1857." 



TJahatzae ( Vd - hit - tza -e). A former 

 puel)lo of the Jemez (q. v.), in New 

 Mexico, the exact site of which is not 

 known. — Bandelierin Arch. Inst. Papers, 

 IV, 207, 1892. 



Uainuints ( 'digger people'). A Paiute 

 band formerly living about St George, 

 s. w. Utah, mmiheringSO in 1873. The 

 signilicance of the name arises from the 

 fact that this was the only Paiute band 

 in this region which practised agricul- 

 ture. The English translation of the 

 name, "Diggers," subsequently was ap- 

 plied to all root-digging Indians, and, as 

 according to the general idea this i)rac- 

 tice implied a low type of culture, the 

 term became synonymous with all that 

 is low and degraded. (ii. av. ii.) 



tJ'-ai-Nu-ints.— I'owell in Ind. Aff. Rep. 1873, 50, 

 1874. Urai-Nuints.— Ingalls in H. R. Ex. Doc. 66, 

 42d Cong.. 3d sess., 2, 1873. 



TJalik. A Togiagamiut Eskimo village 

 on Kulukak bav, Alaska; pop. 68 in 

 1880. 



Ooailik. — Post-route map, 1903. Ooallikh. — Petroff 

 in 10th Census, Alaska, 17, 1884. 



TJames. Given by Ker (Travels, 93, 

 1816), as the name of a tribe in the 

 Caddo country, apparently in extreme 

 N. w. Louisiana. Not identifiable, and 

 probably an invented name. 



Uapige (Tewa: U((p-i-<je, or Wap-i-ge). 

 A prehistoric Tano pueblo e. of Lamy 

 station, on the A. T. & S. F. R. R., some 

 distance in the mountains, in n. central 

 New Mexico. — Bandelier in Arch. Inst. 

 Papers, iv, 100, 1892. 



Ubakhea. A Pomo division, or prob- 

 ably a village, near the Shanel, in s. 

 Mendocino co., Cal., and speaking the 

 same language. — Gibbs (1851) in School- 

 craft, Ind. Tribes, in, 112, 1853. 



TJciiak. A Kuskwogmiut Eskimo vil- 

 lage on the right bank of Kuskokwim r., 

 Alaska. 



trchagmjut.— Holmberg, Ethnog. Skizz., map, 1855. 

 TJgokhamiut.— yth Census, Alaska, 164, 1893. 



Uchapa. Given as a Karok village on 

 Klamath r., n. w. Cal. 



Ut-cha-pah.— MeKee(185l) in Sen. Ex. Doc. 4, 32d 

 Cong., spec, sess., 194, 1853. Ut-cha-pas.— Ibid., 

 215 (given as a Hupa division). TIt-chap-pah. — 

 Ibid . , 1 61 . TJt-scha-pahs. — Meyer, Nach dem Sacra- 

 mento, 282, 1855. 



Uchean Family. A linguistic family 

 limited, so far as is positively known, to 

 a single tribe, the Yuchi (q. v.). 

 =1X011668. — Gallatin in Trans, and Coll. Am. 

 Antiq. Soc, ii, 95. 1836 (based on the Yuchi 

 alone): Bancroft, Hist. U.S.,iii, 247, 1840; Gallatin 

 in Trans. .\m. Ethnol. Soc, n, pt. 1. cxix,77, 1848; 

 Keane in Stanford, Compend.,Cent. and So. Am., 

 app., 472, 1878 (suggests that the language may 

 have been akin to Natchez). =1Jtch6es.— Galla- 

 tin in Trans, and Coll. Am. Antiq. Soc, ii, 306, 

 1836; Gallatin in Schoolcraft, Ind. Tribes, in, 401, 

 1853; Keane in Stanford, Compend., Cent, and 

 So. Am., app., 472. 1878. =0tschi6s. — Berghaus 

 (1845), Physik. Atlas, map 17. 1848; Ibid., 1852. 

 =XTche.— Latham, Nat. Hist. Man., 338, 18.50 (Coosa 

 river); Latham in Trans. Philol. Soc. Lend., ii, 



