pegwolaw D See no. 11.
11. otweg D P. 227. These three villages were "referred
to" but their location not pointed out by
Waterman's informants. He suggests they
may have been suburbs of _rekwoi_. Kroeber
shows _otwego_ as an intermittently
occupied village on his map and calls it
somewhat doubtful as a separate village on
p. 10. _kestitsa_ and _pegwolaw_ he calls
suburbs.
It is clear that a constellation of
villages was located here aboriginally,
centered around _rekwoi_. Waterman in
his list assigns 25 houses to _rekwoi_,
9 to _welkwa_ and none to the others.
Regardless of their status of independence
or permanency there are too many of
these remembered sites to be ignored.
Consequently 3 houses each are assigned to
Waterman's two best authenticated sites,
_tsekwei_ and _tmri_, and to Merriam's
sites _awmennok_ and _kere_.
12. osegen C P. 234. A "small town." Informants recalled
3 houses and 2 sweathouses.
13. hopaw C P. 234. "The small pox raged here in the
early days and practically broke up the
village." This may be a clue to the status
of the sites around _rekwoi_. If so, all
modern informants may be too low in their
estimates of houses in the area.
14. wokel C No question.
15. trwr C See no. 16.
16. ahlawsl C P. 235. According to Waterman this was a
camp site. There were very old house pits
dating from a time before the memory of
informants at _trwr_. They had been all
washed away in Waterman's time. Kroeber
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