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Happy editing! RedPanda25 23:28, 21 October 2020 (UTC)

Where do the Yamparika come from?

 * Article Yampa Utes says the Yampa (Yapudttka/Yampadttka/Yamparka/Yamparika)[citation needed] (who speak Northern Uto-Aztecan: Southern Numic: Colorado River: Ute/núu-'apaghapi) are bands of the White River Utes who lived along the Yampa River Valley.
 * According to Encyclopedia of Immigration and Migration in the American West, they are called "root-eaters"
 * Article Yampa River says the Yampa River was named for the Snake Indians' word for the Perideridia plant, an edile-root plant.[citation lost] The Snake Indians are:
 * Northern Paiute
 * Bannock
 * Shoshone (who speak Northern Uto-Aztecan: Central Numic: Shoshoni)
 * Comanche (who speak Northern Uto-Aztecan: Central Numic: Comanche/nʉmʉ tekwapʉ̲) broke off and travelled to Texas. Pre-1750 Spanish I.D.'d 3 Comanche Naciónes:
 * Hʉpenʉʉ (Jupe, Hoipi)
 * Kʉhtsʉtʉhka (Kotsoteka)
 * Yaparʉhka (Yamparika)
 * H. Allen Anderson at the Texas State Historical Association calls the Yamparikas Comanche, speculating the Yamparikas were the last of the Comanches to break away from the Shoshones. Anderson says the name Yamparikas means "root eaters", for the root called a yap.
 * Looks like there were two tribes called the Yampa (Yamparka).