Hale gives short vocabularies of the Pujuni, Sekumne, and Tsamak. Hale did not apparently consider the evidence as a sufficient basis for a family, but apparently preferred to leave its status to be settled later.

[GEOGRAPHIC DISTRIBUTION.]

The tribes of this family have been carefully studied by Powers, to whom we are indebted for most all we know of their distribution. They occupied the eastern bank of the Sacramento in California, beginning some 80 or 100 miles from its mouth, and extended northward to within a short distance of Pit River, where they met the tribes of the Palaihnihan family. Upon the east they reached nearly to the border of the State, the Palaihnihan, Shoshonean, and Washoan families hemming them in in this direction.

[PRINCIPAL TRIBES.]
Bayu.
Boka.
Eskin.
Hélto.
Hoak.
Hoankut.
Hololúpai.
Koloma.
Konkau.
Kū´lmeh.
Kulomum.
Kwatóa.
Nakum.
Olla.
Otaki.
Paupákan.
Pusúna.
Taitchida.
Tíshum.
Toámtcha.
Tosikoyo.
Toto.
Ustóma.
Wapúmni.
Wima.
Yuba.
[QUORATEAN FAMILY.]

> Quoratem, Gibbs in Schoolcraft, Ind. Tribes, III, 422, 1853 (proposed as a proper name of family “should it be held one”).

> Eh-nek, Gibbs in Schoolcraft, Ind. Tribes, III, 423, 1853 (given as name of a band only; but suggests Quoratem as a proper family name).

> Ehnik, Latham in Trans. Philolog. Soc. Lond., 76, 1856 (south of Shasti and Lutuami areas). Latham, Opuscula, 342, 1860.

= Cahrocs, Powers in Overland Monthly, 328, April, 1872 (on Klamath and Salmon Rivers).