- The
Tsetsaut (Nisga'a language: Jits'aawit; in the
Tsetsaut language: Wetaŀ or Wetaɬ) were an Athabaskan-speaking
group whose territory was
around the...
- The
Tsetsaut language is an
extinct Athabascan language formerly spoken by the now-extinct
Tsetsaut in the Behm and
Portland Canal area of
Southeast Alaska...
-
about Tsetsaut, and for this
reason it is
routinely placed in its own
tentative subgroup.
Tsetsaut subgroup Tsetsaut (also
known as
Tsʼetsʼaut, Wetalh)...
- (Bella Bella, at the
community of the same name)
Wuikinuxv (Owekeeno)
Tsetsaut (extinct Atha****n-speakers)
These people traditionally used
tipis covered...
-
Cahto Eyak
Holikachuk Kwalhioqua-Clatskanie
Lipan Mattole Plains Apache Tsetsaut Tututni Upper Umpqua Wailaki Eskaleut Inuit Inupiat Aleut Alutiiq Central...
- doi:10.1086/463746. Tharp,
George W. (January 1972). "The
Position of the
Tsetsaut among Northern Atha****ns".
International Journal of
American Linguistics...
- are the
Gitxsan (also
spelled Gitksan), Gitanyow, Nisga'a, Tahltan, and
Tsetsaut. The river's name
honors Canadian Army
Lieutenant Duncan Peter Bell-Irving...
- area of the
British Columbia Interior.
Another group in this region, the
Tsetsaut,
lived in the
Portland Canal area of the
northernmost BC
Coast near the...
- and the rest of the
Portland Canal had
previously been the
domain of the
Tsetsaut people, also
called the Skam-a-Kounst Indians, or Jits'aawit in Nisga'a...
- "at the back of (someplace)". The
upper end of the
inlet was home to the
Tsetsaut (Jitsʼaawit in Nisgaʼa), who
after being decimated by war and
disease were...