. Bulletin. Ethnology. 1010 YUKUT8 YUMA [B. A. E. Yakuts. A Squawmish village commu- nity on the right bank of Squawmisht r., Brit. Col. Yik'ts.—Boas, MS., B. A. E., 1S87. Yu'kuts.—Hill- Tout ill Rep. Brit. A. A. S., 474,1900. Yukweakwioose. A Chilliwack village on lower Chilliwack r., which flows into the lower Fraser, Brit. Col ; pop. 26 in 1909. Yahweakwioose.— AIT. Rep., pt. 2,44 1909. Yakweakwioose.—Can. Iiul. Aff. Rep., 277, 1894. Yak-y-you.—Ibirt., 309, 1S79. Yukkweakwioose.— Ibid.,pt. II, 160, 1901. Yukukweu's.—Hill-Tout in Rep. N. \V. Tribes of 4, 1902. Yu-kwea-kwi- oose


. Bulletin. Ethnology. 1010 YUKUT8 YUMA [B. A. E. Yakuts. A Squawmish village commu- nity on the right bank of Squawmisht r., Brit. Col. Yik'ts.—Boas, MS., B. A. E., 1S87. Yu'kuts.—Hill- Tout ill Rep. Brit. A. A. S., 474,1900. Yukweakwioose. A Chilliwack village on lower Chilliwack r., which flows into the lower Fraser, Brit. Col ; pop. 26 in 1909. Yahweakwioose.— AIT. Rep., pt. 2,44 1909. Yakweakwioose.—Can. Iiul. Aff. Rep., 277, 1894. Yak-y-you.—Ibirt., 309, 1S79. Yukkweakwioose.— Ibid.,pt. II, 160, 1901. Yukukweu's.—Hill-Tout in Rep. N. \V. Tribes of 4, 1902. Yu-kwea-kwi- oose.—Can. Ind. Aff. Rep., 414, 1S98. Yuk-yuk-y- yoose.—Brit. Col. map, Ind. Aff., Victoria, 1872. Yulalona {Yu-la-lo^-na). A former set- tlement of Klamath and IModoc at the site of the present Linkville, Oreg.— Gatschet in Cont. N. A. Ethnol., ii, pt. i, xxiv, 1890. Yuloni ( Yu-lo^-7u). A division of the Miwok formerly living on Sutter cr., not far from Amador, Amador co., Cal. Yulonees.—Powers in Overland Mo., X, 322, 1874. Yu-lo'-ni.—Powers in Cont. N. A. Ethnol., in, 349, 1877. Yuma ( Yahm(h/n, 'son of the captain,' seemingly the title of the son of the he- reditary chief, contracted and applied to the tribe through misunderstanding. by the early Spanish missionaries.— Hardy. They call themselves Kwichdna). One of the chief divisions, or tribes, of the Yuman family {q. v.), formerly re- siding on both sides of the Rio Colorado next above the Cocopa, or about 50 or 60 m. from the mouth of the river, and be- low the junction of the (iila. Ft Yuma is situated about the center of the terri- tory formerly occupied by them. When Onate visited the locality in 1604-05, he found the 'Coahuanas' (Cuchan) in 9 rancherias on the Colorado, entirely be- low the mouth of the Uila. Physically the Yuma were a fine people, superior in this respect to most of their congeners. Though brave and not unwarlike they were in no sense nomadic, seldom leav- ing their own villag


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