866 



UMANA UNADUTI 



iB. A. E. 



tJlukak.— Jackson. Reindeer in Alaska, map, 145, 

 1894. Tllukuk.— Dall, Alaska, map, 1870. 



Umana ( ' the heart' ) . A winter village 

 of Ita Pvskiino on Wolstenholme sd., n. 

 Greenland. 



Omenak. — Inglefield in Jour. Roy. Geog. Soc, 

 138, 1853. Oomenak. — Kane, Aret. Explor., i. 45, 

 1866. TJ'mana. — Stein in Petermanns Mitteil., 

 198. 1902. 



Umanak. A village of the southern 

 group of East Greenland Eskimo, lat. 

 63°. — Eink in Deutsche Geog. Bliitt., viii, 

 345, 1886. 



Umanak. A IMoravian mission station 

 and P^skimo settlement in w. Greenland, 

 near Godthaab. — Nansen, First Crossing, 

 II, 204, 1890. 



Umanak. An Eskimo settlement in 

 Umanak fjord, n. of Nugsuak penin., w. 

 Greenland, about lat. 71°. 



Umanaktuak. A winter settlement of 

 Talirpia Okomiut Eskimo on an island 

 near the s. w. coast of Cumberland sd., 

 not far from the 

 entrance. 

 Annanactook. — 

 Kumlien in Bull. 

 15, U. S. Nat. Mils., 

 15, 1879. TJmanaq- 

 tuaq. — Boas in (ith 

 Rep. B. A. E., 426, 

 1888. TJmanaKtuaK. — 

 Boas in Petermanns 

 Mitteil., xvn, no 

 80, p. 70, 1885. 



Umatilla. A 



Shahaptian tribe 

 formerly living 

 on Umatilla r. 

 and the adjacent 

 banks of the Co- 

 lumbia in Ore- 

 gon. They were 

 included under 

 the Wallawalla 

 by Lewis and 

 Clark in 1805, 

 though their lan- 

 guage is distinct. 

 In 1855 they 

 joined in a treaty with the United States 

 and settled on Umatilla res. in e. Oregon. 

 They are said to number 250, but this fig- 

 ure is doubtful, owing to the mixture of 

 tribes on the reservation. (l. f. ) 



TJmatila.— Ncsmith in Ind. Aff. Rep. 1857, 323, 

 1858. TJmatillas.— U.S. Stat., XII, 945,1863. TItella.— 

 Ravmdndin II. R. Ex. Doc. 93, 34th Cong., 1st sess., 

 106, 1856. TJtillas.— Schoolcraft, Ind. Tribes, v, 493, 

 18.55. You-ma-talla.— Ross, Fiir Hunters, 1, 186, 18.55. 

 Yumatilla.— Gatschet in Am. Antiq., ii, 216, 1880. 



Umiak. See Oomiak. 



Umivik. A village of the southern 

 group of East Greenland Eskimo on 

 Gyldenluve fjord, lat. 64° 24^ 



Umivik. A village of the Angmagsal- 

 ingmiut Eskimo on an island in Angmags- 

 alik fjord, Greenland; pop. 19 in 1884. 

 Umerik.— Rink in Deutsche Geog. Bliitt., vni,348, 

 1886. tTmivik,— Meddelelser om Gronland, ix, 

 379, 1889. 



Umnokalukta. A Kowagmiut Eskimo 

 fishing village on Black r., a s. branch of 

 Kobuk r., Alaska. 



UMATILLA WOMEN 



Xlm-nok-a-liik-ta.— Healy, Cruise of Corwin, 28, 



1887. 



Umpqna. An Athapascan tribe for- 

 merly settled on upper Umpqua r., Oreg., 

 E. of the Kuitsh. Hale (Ethnol. and 

 Philol., 204, 1846) said they were supposed 

 to number not more than 400, having 

 been greatly reduced by disease. They 

 lived in houses of boards and mats, and 

 derived their sustenance mainly from the 

 river. In 1902 there were 84 on Grande 

 Ronde res., Oregon. Their chief village 

 was Hewut. A partof them, the Nahankh- 

 uotana, lived along Cow cr. All the 

 Athapascan tribes of s. Oregon were once 

 considered divisions of the Umpqua. 

 Parker (Jour., 262, 1842) named as divi- 

 sions the unidentified Palakahu, the 

 uncertain Skoton and Chasta, and the 

 Chilula and Kwatami. 



A-ampkua amim. — Gatschet, Kalapuya MS., B. A. 

 E. (Atfalati name). Amgutsuish.— Gatschet, MS., 

 B. A. E.^ (Shasta 

 name) . Ampkokni 

 tnaklaks. — Gatschet 

 in Cont. N. A. Eth- 

 nol., II, pt. 2, 20, 1890 

 (Klamath name). 

 Ampkua. — Gatschet, 

 Ncstucca MS. vo- 

 cab., B. A. E. (Nes- 

 t u c c a name). 

 Ankwa. — Sapir in 

 Am. Anthr., ix, 

 253, 1907 {own 

 name). Cacta"'- 

 q-wut-me' ^unne. — 

 Dorsey, Nalttjnne- 

 tunnC MS. vocab., 

 B. A. E., 1884. Ci- 

 c t a ' - q wu t-m e' 

 junne. — Dorsev, 

 Tutu MS. vocab., B. 

 A. E., 1884 ('Umpqua 

 r. people'). Ci-sta'- 

 q w u t . — D o r s e V , 

 C'hasta Costa MS. 

 vocab., B. A. E., 

 1.S84. Etnemitane. — 

 Gatschet, Umpqua 

 MS. vocab., B. A. E., 

 1877 (own name). 

 Etnemi-teneyu. — 

 Ibid, dmkwa. — 

 Buschmann, Athapask. Sprachstamm, 153, 1854. 

 Tsan Ampkua amim. — Gatschet, Lakmiut MS., B. 

 A. E., ('peopleon theUmpqua': Lakmiut name). 

 tJmbaqua. — Parker, Jour., 257, 1840. TJmbiqua. — 

 Ibid., map, 1838. Umguas. — Hale, Ethnol. and 

 Philol. ,198,1846. Umkwa.— Ibid., 204. ■Um'-kwa-me' 

 iiinne.— Dorsey, Chetco MS. vocab., B. A.E.,1884. 

 Umpaquah. — Ind. Aff. Rep., 218, 1856. TJmpqua. — 

 Hale, Ethn. and Philol., 204, 1846. Umpquahs 

 proper.— Gibbs, Obs. on coast tribes, MS., B. A. E. 

 TJmpqua Irins.— Dole in Ind. Aft". Rep., 220, 1861. 

 tJmqua. — Framboise quoted by Gairdner (1835) in 

 Jour. Geog. Soc. Lond., xi, 2-56, 1841. TJmque.— 

 Duflot de Mofras, Expl., ii, 103, 1844. TJnikwa.— 

 Schoolcraft, Ind. Tribes, i, 437, 1851 (misprint). 

 Upper Umpqua.— Milhau, HewfitMS. vocab., B. A. 

 E. Ya"gala£.— Sapir in Am. Anthr.. ix, 253, 1907 

 (Takelma name). Yampequaws. — Meek in H. R. 

 Ex. Doc. 76, 30th Cong., 1st sess., 10, 1848. 



XJnaduti ( Und'didi, 'woolly, or bushy, 

 head,' from imddcna, 'woolly,' dXdi, re- 

 ferring to the head). A distinguished 

 mixed-l)lood Cherokee chief, commonly 

 known to the whites as Dennis W. Bushy- 

 head; born Mar. 18, 1826, at a small Chero- 

 kee settlement then on Mouse cr., about 



