4
24 l 3
25 t 4
26 t 2
27 Mp 3
28 Mp 3
29 l 3 3 4
30 tp 3
32 l 4 } }
33 l 13 } 13 } 7
34 l 22 18 24
35 l 24 17+ 20
36 l 4 4 3
37 l 5 6 7
38 Mp 3
39 Mp 3
40 l 6 7 6
41 tp 5
42 l 3 4 4
43 tp 6
44 l 4 } }
45 l 11 } 21 } 14
45 l 8 } }
47 l 4 } 14 } 6
48 l 6
49 l 5
50 l 3
51 l 1
52 l 2
53 l 4
54 l 6
55 l 17
56 l 6
57 l 5
58 l 4
59 l 2
60 l 3
61 l 7
63 l 7
65 t 2
66 l 5
67 l 10
68 l 5
69 tp 5
70 tp 3
71 t 4
72 l 5
73 l 18
75 Mp 7
76 Mp 3
77 l 14
78 t 4
THE WIYOT
There are three primary ethnographic sources for the population of the
Wiyot. The first is the extensive monograph by Loud (1918), the second
a short paper by Nomland and Kroeber (1936), and the third the village
lists of Merriam.
Loud based his data on interviews with numerous informants together
with a rather cursory visual inspection of the region. He shows nearly
two hundred sites of all kinds on his map and differentiates by means
of conventional symbols between what he calls "archaeological" and
"modern village" sites. By the latter he means settlements which were
occupied at approximately the time of the American
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