- The
Cochimí were the
Indigenous inhabitants of the
central part of the Baja
California peninsula, from El
Rosario in the
north to San
Javier in the south...
-
therefore called Yuman–
Cochimí, with
Yuman being the extra-
Cochimí languages.
Yuman Cochimí † (Northern
Cochimí and
Southern Cochimí may have been distinct...
- and
closed in 1817. The missionary's
objective was to
convert the
local Cochimí Native Americans (Indians) to Christianity. A
mission church survives and...
-
California at the time of
first contact include the Paipai,
Kumeyaay (Kumiai),
Cochimí, Cucapás (Cocopá), Kiliwa,
Guaycura (Guaicura or Waicuri), and Pericú peoples...
-
Okenia cochimi is a
species of sea slug,
specifically a
dorid nudibranch, a
marine gastropod mollusc in the
family Goniodorididae. This
species was described...
-
Cochimí was once the
language of the
greater part Baja California, as
attested by
Jesuit do****ents of the 18th century. It
seems to have
become extinct...
- the region. The
Cochimí of the peninsula's
Central Desert were
generalized hunter-gatherers who
moved frequently; however, the
Cochimí on
Cedros Island...
-
north of
Mexico Algonquian languages: Kikapú Yuman–
Cochimí languages: Paipai, Kiliwa, Cucapá,
Cochimi and
Kumiai Uto-Aztecan languages:
Tepiman branch:...
- Monument. The
mission is
named after both
Saint Rosalia and the
indigenous Cochimí settlement of Mulegé. The
mission was
founded in 1705 by the
Jesuit missionary...
- in the area
north of the Pericú to Loreto, the
Monquis near
Loreto and
Cochimí in the
middle of the peninsula. All were hunter/gatherers
without agriculture...