J 
mtn. and th ''°cbolleta land grant take 
their name from the settlement. 
(P. W. H. ) 
Ceballeta. — Hughes, Doniphan’s Exped., 125, 1848. 
Cebellitita, — Parke, map New Mexico, 1851. Ce- 
boleta. — Hughes, Doniphan’s Exped., map, 1848. 
Cebolleta, — Ibid., 146. Cebolletta. — Buschmann, 
Neu-Mexico, 247, 1858 (misquoting Abert). Gevol- 
leta. — Brevoort, New Mexico, 22, 1874. Cevolleto, — 
Domenech, Deserts of N. A. , ii, 7, 1860. Cibaleta. — 
Buschmann, Neu-Mexico, 247, 1858. Cibaletta. — 
Ibid., 247. Ciboletta, — Am. Ethnol. Soc. Trans., 
ii, map, 1848. Cibolleta. — Abert in Emory, Recon- 
noissance, 468,1848. Cibolletta, — Ibid., 465; John- 
ston, ibid., 589. Seboyeta. — U. S. Land Off. map, 
1903. Sevolleta. — Cortez (1799) in Pac. It. R. Rep., 
in, pt. 3, 119, 1856. Sibolletta.— Folsom, Mexico, 
map, 1842. 
Ceca. Mentioned by Onate (Doc. Ined., 
xvi, 114, 1871) as a pueblo of the Jemezin 
New Mexico in 1598. The name can not 
be identified with the present native name 
of any ruined settlement in the vicinity. 
Leeca. — Onate, op. cit.,102. 
Celts. Ungrooved axes or hatchets of 
stone, metal, or other hard material. 
It is uncertain whether the name is de- 
Hematite Celt; w. va. 
(about 1-3) 
celt Shaped for inserting in 
Handle; N. C. ( i - 6 ) 
Chisel-shaped Celt; Tenn. 
(1-4) 
Short, Thick Celt; Ala. 
(1-4) 
rived from the Latin celtis, ‘chisel,’ to 
which the implement bears some resem- 
blance, or from the Welsh cellt, ‘a flint 
stone.’ The celts range in weight from 
less than half an ounce to more than 20 
pounds, while the diversity of form is 
very great. Their distribution is more 
general than that of the grooved ax. The 
