cache in Fresno County, California, ca. 1920. Mono people used acorns for their bread and families typically had 8 or 9 baskets of this size for acorns. The current tribal name "Mono" is a
Yokutsan loanword from the tribe's western neighbors, the
Yokuts, who however hereby designated the Owens valley Paiutes as the southernmost Northern Paiute band living around "owens lake" / Mono Lake as
monachie/monoache ("
fly people") because fly
larvae was their chief food staple and trading article and
not the "Mono". This "
Kucadikadi Northern Paiute Band", whose autonym ''Kutsavidökadö/Kutzadika'a
means "eaters of the brine fly pupae", are also known as Mono Lake Paiute
or Owens Valley Paiute'', a holdover from early anthropological literature, and are often confused with the non-Northern Paiute ethnic group of the Western mono "Mono". The "Eastern Mono" referred to themselves as
Numa/Nuumu or
Nüümü ("People") in their Mono/Bannock language dialect and to their kin to the west as
Panan witü / Pana witü ("western place" People); the "Western Mono" called themselves
Nyyhmy/Nimi or
Nim/Nium ("People"); a full blooded "Western Mono" person was called
cawu h nyyhmy.
Eastern Mono (Owens Valley Paiute) The Owens Valley Paiute or Eastern Mono live on the California-Nevada border, they formerly ranged on the eastern side of the southern
Sierra Nevada across the
Owens Valley along the
Owens Rivers from
Long Valley on the north to
Owens Lake on the south, and from the crest of the Sierra Nevada on the west to the
White and
Inyo Mountains including the
Fish Lake and
Deep Springs Valleys on the east. They were predominantly sedentary and settled in fixed settlements along rivers or springs (or artificial canals). The more intensive arable farming by means of partly artificial irrigation enabled them to build up food reserves and thus, in contrast to the "Western Mono bands", to feed larger groups. The
Sedentism is also reflected in their socio-political organization in different "districts" (each with communistic hunting and seed rights, political unity, and a number of villages), whose name mostly ended with
"patü/witü", meaning "place" or "land"; each "district" was under the command of a headman or
pohenaby. Some "Owens Valley Northern Paiute" districts: •
Panatü (Black Rock Territory, south to Taboose Creek) •
Pitama Patü or
Pitana Patü ("south place" =
Bishop, California, extending from the
volcanic tableland and Horton Creek in the Sierra to a line running out into Owens Valley from Waucodayavi, the largest peak south of Rawson Creek. Note that Waucodayavi does not have an English name, but is a peak of approximately 9,280 feet located almost due west of Keough Hot Springs.) •
Ütü’ütü witü or
Anglicized to
Utu Utu Gwaiti ("hot place" =
Benton, California, from
Keough Hot Springs south to Shannon Creek) •
Kwina Patii or
Kwina Patü ("north place" =
Round Valley, California) •
Tovowaha Matii,
Tovowahamatü or
Tobowahamatü ("natural mound place" =
Big Pine, California, south to Big Pine Creek in the mountains, but with fishing and seed rights along Owens River nearly to Fish Springs) •
Tuniga witü, Tunuhu witü or
Tinemaha/Tinnemaha ("around the foot of the mountain place" =
Fish Springs, California) •
Ozanwitü ("salt place" from the saline lake =
Deep Springs Valley, they called their valley
Patosabaya and themselves
Patosabaya nunemu.) •
Ka’o witü ("very deep valley" =
Saline Valley, was Shoshoni with a few intermarried Paiute, but was accessible to Paiute for salt) The tribal areas of the "Eastern Mono bands" bordered in the northwest on the areas of the hostile Southern Sierra Miwok with which it often came to conflicts, in the northeast several Northern Paiute bands migrated, in the southeast and south the
Timbisha Shoshone and
Western Shoshone bands, in the southwest the
Tübatulabal (also:
Kern River Indians) and in the west the "Western Mono bands". The Owens Valley Paiute were also more aggressive and hostile towards neighboring Indian tribes and most recently they fought the Americans in the "
Owens Valley Indian War" (1862 to 1863) with allied Shoshone, Kawaiisu and Tübatulabal The Owens Valley Paiutes are The southernmost Northern Paiute Band. Their self-designation is
Numa, Numu, or
Nüümü, meaning "People" or ''Nün'wa Paya Hup Ca'a' Otuu'mu''—"Coyote's children living in the water ditch". •
Big Pine Paiute Tribe of the Owens Valley,
Big Pine, California (also Timbisha) •
Fort Independence Indian Community of Paiute Indians,
Independence, California •
Lone Pine Paiute-Shoshone Tribe,
Lone Pine, California •
Bishop Paiute Tribe,
Bishop, California (also Timbisha) •
Utu Utu Gwaitu Paiute Tribe of the Benton Paiute Reservation,
Benton, California Western Mono , 1902. The "Western Mono" bands in the western southern Sierra Nevada foothills in the
San Joaquin Valley (
San Joaquin River was called
typici h huu' – "important, great river"),
Kings River and
Kaweah River (in today's counties of Madera, Fresno and Tulare) lived mostly as typical semi-nomadic hunters and gatherers of fishing, hunting and gathering as well as agriculture. In the winter, several families descended into the river valleys and built together fixed settlements, most of which were used for several years. In the summer, the family groups migrated as hunters and gatherers to the more sheltered and cooler altitudes of the mountains. Therefore, these smaller groups are sometimes considered socio-politically not as bands but as local groups. The tribal areas of the "Western Mono" bordered the (mostly) hostile
Southern Sierra Miwok in the north, the "Eastern Mono" settled in the east, the Tübatulabal in the southeast and the Foothill Yokuts in the west. Some "Western Mono" bands formed bilingual bands or units with "Foothill Yokuts" and partly took over their culture, so that today – except for one – each "Western Mono" band are only known under its "Yokuts" name. Even in the ethnological literature the original ethnic classification of the bands listed below is controversial; partly they are listed as "Foothill Yokuts bands" (who adopted the "Mono language" and culture through the immigration of the "Western Mono" and soon became bilingual) or as "Western Mono" bands (who would have adopted the language of the dominant "Foothill Yokuts"). In particular, the classification of the two Kings River bands – the Michahai / Michahay and Entimbich – is difficult. The Western Mono self-designation is
Nyyhmy, Nimi, Nim or
Nium, meaning "People" or
cawu h nyyhmy. By contact with the Europeans, the following bands (or local groups) could be distinguished (from north to south): •
Northfork Mono or
Nim / Nium: most isolated band of the "Western Mono", therefore not known under a "Yokuts" name. They lived generally along the northern shore of the San Joaquin River westward on both sides of its North Fork (and its tributaries) to Fine Gold Creek (shared territory with the Yokuts there); they established smaller settlements than the more southerly "Western Mono Bands". •
Wobonuch, Wobunuch, Woponunch or
Wobonoch (plural: Wobenchasi): Lived in the foothills west of
General Grant Grove (with the
General Grant Tree) from the mouth of the North Fork Kings River into the
Kings River upstream along several tributaries and including the Kings Canyon, along the Mill Flat Creek alone were two major settlements, their area includes today's
Kings Canyon National Park. •
Entimbich, Endimbich, Endembich or
Indimbich (Plural: Enatbicha): bilingual, probably originally a "Kings River Yokuts Band". Lived along the Kings River south and west of the Wobonuch, their main settlement was located in the area of today's
Dunlap, California, further settlements were along Mill Creek, Rancheria Creek and White Deer Creek. •
Michahai or
Michahay: bilingual, many mixed marriages with neighboring Waksachi, often regarded as a "Kings River Yokuts band". Lived along the Cottonwood Creek, a stream of the
St. John's River, a tributary of the
Kaweah River north of the municipality of
Auckland, California. •
Waksachi (plural: Wakesdachi): bilingual, but basically "Mono (Nim)"-speaking, partly adopted the culture of the neighboring Yokuts. Their tribal area was in the Long Valley south of
Mill Creek and along Eshom Creek, a tributary of the
North Fork Kaweah River, other settlements were along
Lime Kiln Creek (also known as
Dry Creek), such as "Ash Springs" and "Badger Camp". •
Balwisha, Badwisha, Patwisha, Potwisha or
Baluusha: bilingual, but basically "Mono (Nim)"-speaking, partly adopted the culture of the neighboring Yokuts. Lived along the Kaweah River tributaries (Marble, Middle, East and South Forks) westwards to
Lake Kaweah. One of their westernmost villages was located on the left bank of the Kaweah River below the confluence of its North Forks and Middle Forks near the community of
Three Rivers, California (near the confluence of the Middle, East and South Forks), eastwards they had settlements upstream along the Middle and East Forks as well as Salt Creeks. The
Sequoia National Park is located in their territory today, their trading partners were the Wukchumni Yokuts. If the
Entimbich and
Michahai are counted as "Kings River Yokuts" then beside the above-mentioned bands sometimes the following bands are listed: •
Posgisa, Poshgisha or
Boshgesha: Lived on the southern shore of the San Joaquin River and south of the Northfork Mono along Big Sandy Creek to the headwaters of Little and Big Dry Creek; according to reports from neighboring Yokuts, there were two settlements near
Auberry, California. Presumably identical with the group later called "Auberry Band of Western Mono", whose Mono/Nim-language name was
?unaħpaahtyħ ("that which is on the other side [of the San Joaquin River]") or
Unapatɨ Nɨm ("About (the San Joaquin River) People"). •
Holkoma: sometimes synonymously called "Towincheba" or "Kokoheba", but both seems only names for single Holkoma villages. Were living in settlements along a series of confluent streams – especially the Big Creek, Burr Creek and
Sycamore Creek above the mouth of the Mill Creek into the Kings River. •
Big Sandy Rancheria of Mono Indians of California •
Cold Springs Rancheria of Mono Indians of California •
Northfork Rancheria of Mono Indians of California •
Table Mountain Rancheria of California •
Tule River Indian Tribe of the Tule River Reservation The two clans of the North Fork Mono Tribe are represented by the golden eagle and the coyote. Mono traditions still in practice today include fishing, hunting, acorn gathering, cooking, healing, basket making, and games. The Honorable Ron Goode is the Tribal Chairman for the North Fork Mono Tribe, which is not a federally recognized tribe. The North Fork Rancheria of Mono Indians is the federally recognized tribe in North Fork and their chairperson is Elaine Fink. Ceremonies are performed at the Sierra Mono Museum in
North Fork, California, and an annual Indian Fair Days festival takes place on the first weekend of August every year to revive many traditions and rituals for tribal kin and tourists alike to enjoy. ==Language==