Together with the
Oglála Lakȟóta, who are mostly based at the
Pine Ridge Indian Reservation, they are often called
Southern Lakȟóta. They were divided in three great regional tribal divisions: •
Lower Brulé (
Khúl Wičháša Oyáte, "Lowland People", lived along the
White River to its mouth at the
Missouri River (Mnišóše) as well in the Missouri River Valley in South Dakota; some ventured south to the
Niobrara River). •
Upper Brulé (
Ȟeyáta Wičháša Oyáte - ″Highland People″, ventured further south and west onto the Plains along the
Platte River between the North and South Platte River in Nebraska in the search for buffalo. The allied
Southern Cheyenne and
Southern Arapaho accepted the Upper Brulé into their alliance, as well as upon their claimed lands along the
Loup River - the former center of the
Skidi Pawnee. They went south to plunder enemy Pawnee and Arikara camps, and were therefore also known as
Kheyatawhichasha, or ″People away from the (Missouri) River″) •
(Upper) Brulé of the Platte River (a splinter group of the Upper Brulé and the southernmost Sicangu group, generally along the
South Platte River in Colorado, with hunting bands south to the
Republican River - home to the enemy
Kithehaki / Kitkehaxki of the
South Bands Pawnee, also known as:
Kheyatawhichasha - ″People away from the (Missouri) River″) According to the Kul Wicasa (Lower Brulé) Medicine Bull (Tatȟą́ka Wakȟą́), the people were decentralized and identified with the following
thiyóšpaye, or extended family groups, who collected in various local
thiwáhe (English: camps or family circles): • Apewantanka • Chokatowela • Ihanktonwan • Iyakoza • Kanghi yuha • Nakhpakhpa • Pispiza wichasha • Shawala • Shiyolanka • Wacheunpa • Waleghaunwohan ==Ethnobotany==