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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › YoimutYoimut - Wikipedia

    Yoimut or Yo'yomat (c. 1856 – 1937) was a Yokuts woman who was the last speaker of the Chunut language of central California. Josie Alonzo has also been recorded as the last "full-blooded" Chunut. She was a noted polyglot, speaking 8 different Yokutsan languages along with English and Spanish.

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Tulare_LakeTulare Lake - Wikipedia

    Presumably the last autonomous Indigenous people lived at the Tulare Lake archipelago in the 1870s. Yoimut detailed white settlers introducing cattle to the island and subsequently forcing the indigenous people out: While we were at Chawlowin some white men put cattle on the island. The water was low and they drove them across from the east.

  3. Jul 21, 2023 · They herded rabbits into ingenious nets made from tree branches and plant fibers, gathered shellfish from Tulare Lake with their toes, and burned grasslands to flush out protein-rich grasshoppers by the thousands. Yokuts called themselves Yokoch, “the people.”.

  4. Jun 12, 2006 · The Chunuts were a band of Yokuts forced from their homes on the shores of Tulare Lake. In 1933, Yoimut, an 85-year old Chunut woman, told historian Frank Latta that she was the last survivor of her band: All of my life I want back our good home on Tulare Lake. But I guess I can never have it.

  5. Apr 20, 2023 · In rainy years, low-lying parts of the Tulare Basin flooded, and old-timers recalled the prediction of a Yokuts elder named Yoimut. Before her death in 1936, Yoimut predicted to an ethnographer that Tulare Lake would return one day.

  6. Yoimut or Yo'yomat, who adopted the name Josie Alonzo, was a Chunut-Wowol (Yokuts) woman who was the last speaker of the Chunut language of central California. She has also been recorded as the last "full-blooded" Chunut.

  7. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › YokutsYokuts - Wikipedia

    The Yokuts (previously known as Mariposas [4]) are an ethnic group of Native Americans native to central California. Before European contact, the Yokuts consisted of up to 60 tribes speaking several related languages. Yokuts is both plural and singular; Yokut, while common, is erroneous. [5] '.