. Bulletin. Ethnology. 606 SNAKE EIVER SNOQUALMU [b. a. e. Ill, 380,1877) was similar in some respects to the Hopi dance. For detailed information see Bourke, Snake Dance of the Moijuis of Arizona, 1884; Dorsey and Votb, Mishongnovi Ceremonies of the Snake and Antelope Fraternities, Field Colum'bian Mus. Pub.,. HOPI SNAKE DANCE Anthr. ser., iii, no. 3,1902; Fewkes, Snake Ceremonials at Walpi, Jour. Am. Ethnol. and Archa?ol., iv, 1894, and Tusayan Snake Ceremonies, 16th Rep. B. A. E., 1897; Hodge, Pueblo Snake Ceremonials, Am. Anthr., ix, 1896; Hough, Moki Snake Dance, 1898; Stevenson, The Sia,
. Bulletin. Ethnology. 606 SNAKE EIVER SNOQUALMU [b. a. e. Ill, 380,1877) was similar in some respects to the Hopi dance. For detailed information see Bourke, Snake Dance of the Moijuis of Arizona, 1884; Dorsey and Votb, Mishongnovi Ceremonies of the Snake and Antelope Fraternities, Field Colum'bian Mus. Pub.,. HOPI SNAKE DANCE Anthr. ser., iii, no. 3,1902; Fewkes, Snake Ceremonials at Walpi, Jour. Am. Ethnol. and Archa?ol., iv, 1894, and Tusayan Snake Ceremonies, 16th Rep. B. A. E., 1897; Hodge, Pueblo Snake Ceremonials, Am. Anthr., ix, 1896; Hough, Moki Snake Dance, 1898; Stevenson, The Sia, in 11th Rep. B. A. E., 1894. (w. n.) Snake River. A Chippewa band on Mille Lac res., Minn.—Ind. Aff. Rep., 250, 1877. Snakes. A name applied to many dif- ferent bodies of Shoshonean Indians, but most persistently to those of k. Oregon, to which the following synonyms refer. These Indians form one dialectic group with the Paviotso of w. Nevada and the Mono of s. E. California. The principal Snake tribes were the Walpapi and the Yahuskin. For others, see Moiio-Puriotso, Shoshonean Famil;/. (j. r. s.) Aigspaluma.—Gatsch'et in Cont. N. A. Ethnol., ii, pt. 1, xxxiii, 1890 ('Chipmunk people'; applied by the Warm Springs Indians to Oregon Shoshoni and Klamath). Sai'-du-ka,—Powers, Ne- vada, MS., B. A. E., 1876. Sa't—Gatschet, MS., B. A. E. (Klamath and Modoc name for all Shoshonean Indians; sig. 'unclean,' 'disheveled,' 'of low character'). Sha't.—Ibid. Shitaikt.— Mooney, inf n, 1900 (Tenino name, especially for the Shoshoneans of Warm Springs, Oreg.). Shne'- gitsuish.—Gatschet, MS., B. A. E. (Shasta name for a "Snake" Indian). Shoshoni.—Lewis and Clark Exped., II, 594, 1817. Snakestown. A former village, perhaps of the Delawares, on Muskingum r., Ohio, in 1774.—McKee (1774) quoted bv Rupp, W. Penn., app., 211, 1846. Snakwametl {Snd^kwaviEtl). A village belonging to the Snonkweametl, an ex- tinct tribe of Covvichan on lower Eraser r., Brit. Col.—
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