BULL. 30] 



UTINA UTURITUC 



877 



Outina. — Brackenridge, Views of La., 84, 1814. 

 TItina. — Laudouni^re (1564) quoted by Basanier 

 in French, Hist.Coll. La., 261, 1869. TItinama.— 

 Gentl. of Klvas (15.S7) in Bourne, De Soto Narr., i, 

 39, 1904 (in N. w. Florida, 1539). 



irtina. In the narrative of De Soto's 

 expedition it is stated that the Spaniards 

 passed a town, apparently about Suwan- 

 nee r., called Utinama (Gentl. of Elvas, 

 1557) orUtinaniocharra(Kanjel, ca. 1546), 

 probablj' a confusion between a title and 

 a proper name. The ma is a locative 

 suffix; the mocharra remains unexplained. 

 The town probably belonged to the Po- 

 tano tribe. (j. m. ) 



TTtinamocharra.— Ranjel {ca. 1546), in Bourne, De 

 Soto Narr., ii, 70, 1904 (N. w. Florida, 1539). 



TItinomanoc. Mentioned as one of the 

 tribes from which neophytes were drawn 

 by San Francisco Solano mission, Cal. It 

 was probably Moquelumnan. See Ban- 

 croft, Hist. Cal. , II, 506, 1886; Engelhardt, 

 Franc, in Cal., 451, 1897; Barrett in Univ. 

 Cal. Pub., VI, no. 1, 44, 1908. 



Utitnom. The branch of the Yuki of 

 N. California that inhal)ited the angle 

 between the confluence of Middle and 

 South Eel rs. and extended westward 

 across South Eel r. 



TItkiavi ( ' high place' ). The village of 

 the Utkiavinmiut Eskimo at C. Smyth, 

 Alaska, lat. 71° 23' ; pop. 225 in 1880." A 

 Government station was established there 

 in 1881. 



Ooglaamie. -Murdoch in 9th Rep. B. A. E., 26, 1892 

 (given as incorrect form). Ooglamie. — U. S. Sig- 

 nal Serv. map, 1885. Ootivakh.— Baker, Geog. 

 Diet. Alaska, 1902. Ootiwakh.—Petroff in 10th 

 Census, Alaska, 4, 1884. Ootkaiowik.— Ibid. Ot- 

 ke-a-vik.— Simpson, Observations, map, 18-")5. Ot- 

 kiawik.— Baker, op. cit. Ot-ki-a-wing. — Maguire 

 in Pari. Rep., xm, 186, 1S54. Otkiovik. — British 

 Admiralty chart cited bv ISIurdoch in 9th Rep. 

 B. A. E., 26, 1892. Otkiwik.— Brit. Admiralty 

 chart. TJglaamie.— Murdoch, op. cit. (given as 

 incorrect form ). Utkeavic— 11th Census, Alaska, 

 162, 1893. TJtkeagvik. — Zagoskin, Descr. Russ. 

 Poss. Am., pt. I, 74, 1847. TItkiavi.— Baker, op. cit. 

 Utkiaving. — Ibid. Tltkiavwifi. — Murdoch, op. cit. 



Utkiavinmitit. An Eskimo tribe w. of 

 Pt Barrow, Alaska; pop. about 140 in 

 1883, 246 in 1890. They flourished about 

 1870, but have since declined and keep 

 up their numbers by accessions from the 

 Nunatogmiut. Their villages are Pengnok 

 and TItkiavi; summercampsareErnivwin, 

 Imekpung, Ipersua, Kuosugru, Nake- 

 duxo, Nunaktuau, Sakamna, Sinyu. Wal- 

 akpa. 



Ootkeaviemutes. — Kelly, .\rct. Eskimo, chart, 1890. 

 Ootkeavies. — Ibid., 14. TItkiavwinmiun. — Murdoch 

 in 9th Rep. B. A. E., 43, 1892. 



Utlaksuk. An Eskimo settlement near 

 the N. end of Baffin bay, w. Greenland. 

 Utiak-soak,— Kane, Arct. Explor., ii, .55, 1856. 



TItlums. An abandoned Salishan vil- 

 lage on the s. side of Galiano id., Brit. 

 Col. 

 Ut-lums.— Dawaon, Can. Geol. Surv., map, 1887. 



TItoca. An ancient village in n. Florida, 

 probablv Timucuan. — Robin, Voy., ii, 

 map, 1807. 



Utorkarmiut. A ruined Eskimo village 

 on the E. shore of Sermiligak fjord, e. 



Greenland. — Meddelelser om Gronland, 



XXVII, 22, 1902. 



Utsehta (' lowlanders') . One of the 

 three principal divisions of the Osage 

 tribe. 



Lesser Osage.— Fisher, New Trav. , 250, 1812. Little 

 Osage. — Treatv of 1865 in U. S. Indian Treat., ii, 

 878, 1904. Little Ossage.— Schermerhorn (1812) in 

 Mass. Hist. Soc. Coll., 2d s., ii, 31, 1814. Oo'-za- 

 tau.— Lewis and Clark Discov., 13, 1806. Petit 

 Osage. — Bradbury, Trav. in Am., 36, 1817. Petits 

 Os. — Du Lac, Voy. dans les Louisianes, map, 1805. 

 Petit Zo.— Lewis and Clark Discov., 13, 1806. Teat 

 Saws. — Featherstonhaugh, Slave States, 71, 1844. 

 U^seq'ta.— McGee in 15th Rep. B. A. E., 162, 1897 

 (own name). 



Uttamussac. A village of the Powha- 

 tan confederacy in 1608, situated on the 

 N. bank of Pamunkey r. in King William 

 CO., Va. The principal temple of the 

 confederacy was here. 



Uttamussack.— Smith (1629), Va., I, 138, repr. 1819. 

 Vtamussack.— Strachey (1612), Va., 90, 1849. Vtta- 

 mussak. — Smith, op. cit., map. 



TJttamussamacoma. A village of the 

 Powhatan confederacy in 1608, situated 

 on the s. bank of Potomac r. in West- 

 moreland CO., Va. 



Vttamussamacoma. — Smith (1629), Va., r, map, 

 repr. 1819. 



TItuka ('the old place'). The chief 

 village of the Utukamiut Eskimo at Icy 

 cape, Alaska; pop. 50 in 1880, 48 in 1890. 

 Otok-kok.— Petroff, Rep. on Alaska, .59, _1880. 

 Otukah.— Baker, Geog. Diet. Alaska, 1902. O'-tu- 

 kah. — Murdoch quoted by Baker, Geog. Diet. 

 Alaska, 1902. Utuka.-llth Census, Alaska, 152, 

 1893. 



Utukamiut. A nomadic tribe of Es- 

 kimo which originated at Icy cape and now 

 range along the Arctic coast from Pt 

 Hope to Wainright inlet and inland to 

 Colville r. Through intermarriage with 

 the Nunatogmiut, Kowagmiut, and Ko- 

 pagmiut they have developed physically 

 and mentally beyond the sedentary 

 tribes of n. w. Alaska. Their villages 

 are Kaiaksekawik, Kelemanturuk, and 

 Utuka. 



Ootooka Mutes. — Kelly, Arct. Eskimos, chart, 1890. 

 Ootookas. — Ibid., 14. Oto-kog-ameuts. — Hooper, 

 Cruise of Corwin, 26, 1880. TJtukakgmut. — Zagos- 

 kin, Descr. Russ. Po.ss. Am., pt. I, 74, 1847. Utuka- 

 miut.— Woolfe in 11th Census, Alaska, 130, 1893. 



TItumpaiats ( U-tum^-pai-ats, ' people of 

 arrowhead lands ' ). A Paiute band for- 

 merly in or near Moapa valley, s. e. Ne- 

 vada; pop. 46 in 1873. — Powell in Ind. 

 Aff. Rep. 1873, 50, 1874. 



TIturituc (Pima: 'the corner,' because 

 it was situated at the angle of the new 

 and the old stream beds of the Gila). A 

 former Pima village on the Rio Gila, prob- 

 ably on the site of the present Sacaton, 

 about 3 Spanish leagues n. w. of Casa 

 Grande ruin, s. Ariz. It was visited by 

 Garc^s and Anza in 1775, at which time 

 it contained 300 inhabitants. See Anza 

 in Bancroft, Ariz, and N. Mex., 389, 1889; 

 Anza and Font, ibid., 392; Garces (1775- 

 76), Diary, 65, 1900; Bartlett, Pers. Narr., 

 II, 268, 1854. 



San Juan Capistrano.— Carets (1775), Diary, 109, 

 1900. San Juan Capistrans de Virtud.- Font (1775) 



