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Show POWELL.] SHOSHONEAN FAMILY. 109 of tribes and vocabularies, he places " Shoshonees " among his other families, which is sufficient to show that he regarded them as a distinct linguistic group. The vocabulary he possessed was by Say. Buschmann, as above cited, classes the Shoshonean languages as a northern branch of his Nahuatl or Aztec family, but the evidence presented for this connection is deemed to be insufficient. GEOGRAPHIC DISTRIBUTION, This important family occupied a large part of the great interior basin of the United States. Upon the north Shoshonean tribes extended far into Oregon, meeting Shahaptian territory on about the forty- fourth parallel or along the Blue Mountains. Upon the northeast the eastern limits of the pristine habitat of the Shoshonean tribes are unknown. The narrative of Lewis and Clarke1 contains the explicit statement that the Shoshoni bands encountered upon the Jefferson River, whose summer home was upon the head waters of the Columbia, formerly lived within their own recollection in the plains to the east of the Rocky Mountains, whence they were driven to their mountain retreats by the Minnetaree ( Atsina), who had obtained firearms. Their former habitat thus given is indicated upon the map, although the eastern limit is of course quite indeterminate. Very likely much of the area occupied by the Atsina was formerly Shoshonean territory. Later a division of the Bannock held the finest portion of southwestern Montana, 9 whence apparently they were being pushed westward across the mountains by Blackfeet.* Upon the east the Tukuarika or Sheepeaters held the Yellowstone Park country, where they were bordered by Siouan territory, while the Washaki occupied southwestern Wyoming. Nearly the entire mountainous part of Colorado was held by the several bands of the Ute, the eastern and southeastern parts of the State being held respectively by the Arapaho and Cheyenne ( Algonquian), and the Kaiowe ( Kiowan). To the southeast the Ute country included the northern drainage of the San, Juan, extending farther east a short distance into New Mexico. The Comanche division of the family extended farther east than any other. According to Crow tradition the Comanche formerly lived northward in the Snake River region. Omaha tradition avers that the Comanche were on the Middle Loup River, probably within the present century. Bourgemont found a Comanche tribe on the upper Kansas River in 1724.4 According to Pike the Comanche territory bordered the Kaiowe on the north, the former occupying the head waters of the upper Red River, Arkansas, and Rio Grande. 5 How • Allen ed., Philadelphia, 1814, vol. 1, p. 418. » U. S. Ind. Aff., 1869, p. 289. 8Stevens in Pac. R. R. Rep., 1855, vol. 1, p. 329. 4Lewis and Clarke, Allen ed., 1814, vol/ 1, p. 34. 5Pike, Expl. to sources of the Miss., app. pt. 3, 16, 1810. |