BULL. 8(lj 



ZINUOABA ZUNI 



1015 



Nardosot^in, a])Out 1875. — "White, Apache 

 Names of Ind. Trihe.M, MS., B. A. E. 



Zinogaba. INk-ntioned by the Mohave to 

 Juan de Onate in 1604 as a tribe of people, 

 with bald heads, living on an island of 

 the same name a day's journey by boat 

 off the California coast. These Indians 

 were said to wear necklaces and ear orna- 

 ments of pearl shells, called xicullo {shi- 

 kul-i/o), and to jtossess *'an instrument 

 with which they made the noise when 

 they dance, which is a long stick from 

 which are pendent many pieces of that 

 metal [silver] of which they make dishes 

 in which they eat." The tribe had an 

 old "lady or captainess," called Cinaca- 

 cohola, " the height of a-man-and-a-half," 

 very broad, with big feet, who had a sister, 

 also a giantess; there was no man of her 

 kind, and she mingled with no one on 

 the island. See Zarate Salmeron (ai. 

 1629) in Land of Sunshine, 106, Jan. 1900. 

 Zinogova. — Zarate Salmeron, op. cit., lOH. 



Zoar. A Moravian mission among the 

 Suhinimiut Eskimo on the e. coast of 

 Labrador, established in 1865. 



Zoe {tzoi, 'wax,' 'pitch tree'. — 

 Buelna). A tribe formerly inhabiting 

 a small territory in lat. 27°, Ion. 108°, 

 about the Sinaloa-Chihuahua boundary, 

 Mexico. According to a tradition men- 

 tioned by Ribas (Hist. Trium., 145, 1645) 

 they came from the N. together with the 

 Ahome, and although they had a different 

 language and lived somewhat distant from 

 each other, tlie two tribes preserved con- 

 stant friendship. The Zoe esta]>lished 

 themselves on the slopes of the sierra, in 

 a settlement of the same name at the 

 sources of the Rio del Fuerte near the 

 Sinaloa. On their conversion to Chris- 

 tianity the missionaries moved them to 

 the other part of the river, founding a 

 town which comprised the whole tribe. 

 The Zoe and Baimena spoke their par- 

 ticular dialect, although they usually, in 

 communication with others, made use of 

 the Cahita and to some extent also the 

 Nahuatl. They are extinct, (f. w. h.) 

 Chois.— Hardy, Trav., 43.H, lSi9 (referred to as a 

 Mavcj town). Choiz.— Kivera. Diario, leg. 1514, 

 173(i. Troes.— Orozco v Berra, Geog., 333, 1864. 

 Tzoes.— Ibid. Zoe.— Ibid. 



Zogliakten. A Koyukukhotana village 

 of 7 ]jersons in 1844 on the e. bank of 

 Koyukuk r., Alaska. 



Tsogliakhten. — Zagoskin quoted by Petroff in 10th 

 Census. Alaska, 37, 1884. Tsogliakten.— Tikhme- 

 nief ( isci ) fnioted by Baker, Geog. Diet. Alaska, 

 1902. Zogliakten. — Zagoskin in Nouv. Ann. Voy., 

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



Zoht. A village of the Nicola band of 

 Ntlakyapamuk living near the w. end of 

 Nicola lake, 50 m. above Spences Bridge, 

 Brit. Col. Pop. 31 in 1901, the last time 

 the name appears. 



Nicola,— Brit. Col. map, Ind. Aflf., Vietoria. 1872 

 (one of two villages so named on Nicola lake may 

 correspond to this town i. Yoht —Can. Ind. Aff., 

 277, 1X94. Yon-kt.— Ibid., 198, 18«r). Zoht.— Ibid., 



232, 1886. ZoQkt.— Hill-Tout in Rep. Ethnol. Surv. 

 Can., 4, 1899. 



Zolatnngzezhii. A former pueblo of the 

 Jemez in New Mexico, the exact site of 

 which is not known. 



Zo-lat-e-se-djii. — Bandelier in Arch. Inst. Papers, 

 IV, 207, 1892. Zo-la'-tu"-ze-zhi-i.— Hodge, field- 

 notes, B. A. K., 1895. 



Zomiomi. A village, presumably Cos- 

 tanoan, formerly connected with Dolores 

 mission, San Francisco, Cal.- — Tavlor in 

 Cal. Farmer, Oct. 18, 1861. 



Zonagogliakten. A Koyukukhotana 

 village of 11 persons in 1844 on the e. 

 bank of Koyukuk r., Alaska. 

 Tsonagogliakten. — Tikhmenief (1861) quoted by 

 Baker, Geog. Diet. Alaska, 1902. Tsonagolyakh- 

 ten. ^Zagoskin, Descr. Ru.ss. Poss. Am., map, 1848. 

 Zonagogliakten,— Zagoskin in Nouv. Ann. Voy., 

 5th s., XXI, map, 1850. 



Zorquan. A former small tribe repre- 

 sented at San Antonio de Valero mission, 

 Texas. 



Zrohono. A clan of the Hopi which 

 takes its name from a small unidentified 

 mammal. 



Zro-ho-na wiiiiwii. — Fewkes in Am. Anthr., vil, 

 404, 1894. Zrohono wiiiwii. — Fewkes' in 19th Rep. 

 B. A. E., 584, 1900. 



Zuaque {suua, 'interior,' 'middle'; 

 yaqui, 'river': 'river of the middle,' re- 

 ferring to the Rio Fuerte, of which Zuaque 

 is the ancient name. — Buelna). A sub- 

 division of the Cahita, speaking both 

 the Tehueeo and the Yacoregue dialect 

 and occupying a territory extending 10 

 leagues along the middle waters of Rio 

 del Fuerte in n. Sinaloa, Mexico. They 

 occupied the pueblos of IVlochicaui and 

 San Miguel Zuaque, besides another the 

 name of which is unknown. They did 

 not take kindly to the Jesuit missionaries 

 established in their country at the begin- 

 ning of the 17th century, exhibiting a 

 "threatening indifference" to their sal- 

 vation. In 1601 Gov. Hurtaide, with the 

 aid of the Guazave, invaded their coun- 

 try and by a ruse captured and hanged 

 about 40 leading men. 



puaques. — Ribas. Hist. Triiimphos, 171, 1645. 

 Suaque.— Hrdlicka in Am. Anthr., vi, 72, 1904. 

 Suaqui.— Bancroft, No. Mex. States, I, 210, 1886. 

 Zuaque. — Orozco y Berra, Geog., 58, 1864. 



Zucigin. A village, presumably Cos- 

 tanoan, formerly connected with Dolores 

 mission, San Francisco, Cal. — Taylor in 

 Cal. Farmer, Oct. 18, 1861. 



Zukkertop. A Danish trading station 

 in s. w. Greenland. — Crantz, Hist. Green- 

 land, I, 12, 17()7. 



Zumaque. INIentioned as a pueblo of 

 the province of Atripuy (q. v.), in the 

 region of the lower Rio Grande, N. Mex., 

 in 1598.— Onate (1598) in Doc. InM., 

 XVI, 115, 1871. 



Zumblito. A former village, probably 

 Salinan, connected with San Antonio 

 mission, Monterev co., Cal. — Tavlor in 

 Cal. Farmer, Apr." 27, 18()0. 



Zuni. The popular name of a Pueblo 

 tril)e, constituting the Zufiian linguistic 



