. Bulletin. Ethnology. BULL. ?.0] TEOTONGNIATON TEPEHUANE 731 and Chippewa relating to trade and the passage of the Saint Croix route to the Mississippi. He died at Montreal. Teotongniaton. A former village of the Neuters in Ontario. S. Guillaume.—.k's. Ilol. 1641, 78, 1858 (mission name). Teotongniaton,—Ibid. Tepachi (the name of a drink made from fermented aguamas or jocuixtes.— Buelna). A pueblo of the Opata and seat of a Spanish mission founded in 1678; situated on Rio Soyopa, n. e. Sonora, Mexico, about lat. 29° 30^ Pop. 388 in 1678. S. Joaquin y Sta Ana Tepachi.—Zapata (1678) quoted by B

. Bulletin. Ethnology. BULL. ?.0] TEOTONGNIATON TEPEHUANE 731 and Chippewa relating to trade and the passage of the Saint Croix route to the Mississippi. He died at Montreal. Teotongniaton. A former village of the Neuters in Ontario. S. Guillaume.—.k's. Ilol. 1641, 78, 1858 (mission name). Teotongniaton,—Ibid. Tepachi (the name of a drink made from fermented aguamas or jocuixtes.— Buelna). A pueblo of the Opata and seat of a Spanish mission founded in 1678; situated on Rio Soyopa, n. e. Sonora, Mexico, about lat. 29° 30^ Pop. 388 in 1678. S. Joaquin y Sta Ana Tepachi.—Zapata (1678) quoted by B Stock Photo
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. Bulletin. Ethnology. BULL. ?.0] TEOTONGNIATON TEPEHUANE 731 and Chippewa relating to trade and the passage of the Saint Croix route to the Mississippi. He died at Montreal. Teotongniaton. A former village of the Neuters in Ontario. S. Guillaume.—.k's. Ilol. 1641, 78, 1858 (mission name). Teotongniaton, —Ibid. Tepachi (the name of a drink made from fermented aguamas or jocuixtes.— Buelna). A pueblo of the Opata and seat of a Spanish mission founded in 1678; situated on Rio Soyopa, n. e. Sonora, Mexico, about lat. 29° 30^ Pop. 388 in 1678. S. Joaquin y Sta Ana Tepachi.—Zapata (1678) quoted by Bancroft, No. Mex. States, I, 246, 1884. Tepache, —Rivera, Diario, leg. 1382, 1736. Te- pachi.—Escudero, Notieias de Sonora y Sinaloa, 101, 1849. Tepachic ('stony place.' — Och). A Tarahumare settlement in Chihuahua, Mexico; definite locality unknown.— Orozco j'^ Berra, Geog., 322, 1864. Tepaciiuaches. A tribe, probably Coa- huiltecan, encountered by Salinas on the road from Coahuila to San Francisco mis- sion, Texas, in 1693.—Salinas (1693) in Dictamen Fis(;al, Nov. 30, 1716, MS. Tepahue. A division of the -Mayo and also its principal settlement, situated in the mountains about the upper forks of Mayo r., s. Sonora, Mexico. They spoke a dialect slightly different from the Mayo (Zapata, 1678, in Doc. Hist. Mex., 4th s., Ill, 385, 1857). The inhabitants of Conil-ari, a subdivision of this tribe, ap- pear from Zapata's statement to have spoken a dialect somewhat different from the Tepahue proper (Bandelier in Arch. Inst. Papers, iii, 53, 1890). Ac- cording to Ribas (Hist. Trium., 254, 1645), after the reduction of the JNlayo the Te- pahue established themselves in a pueblo (presumably Tepahue) on upper Mayo r., with "about 600 families, and some 2, 000 persons of all ages." The same authority states that Conicari contained about 200 families. According to Orozco y Berra the Tepahue are extinct as a tribe, but there is still a Conicari settlement on or nea