found: Work cat.: Summary under the criteria and evidence ... for federal acknowledgement of the Snowqualmie Tribal Organization ... 1997.
found: Handbk. of No. Am. Ind., 1990:v. 7, p. 179 (Snoqualmie Indian Tribe)
found: Leitch, B. Concise dict. of Ind. tribes of No. Am., 1979(Snuqualmie: a small Northwest Coast group)
found: Dict. of Ind. tribes of the Americas, c1995(Snoqualmie (U.S.; Wash.) are a Coast Salish tribe in the Northwest Coast culture area)
found: U.S. Bureau of Indian Affairs List of federally recognized American Indian Tribes and Alaska Natives, via WWW, Oct. 9, 2001(Snoqualmie Tribe, Washington)
found: OCLC WorldCat, Oct. 7, 2001(subj. hdg.: Snoqualmie Indians; titles: Anthropological report on the Snoqualmie Indian tribe; Ethnozoology of the Snoqualmie)
found: Turner, H. Ethnozoology of the Snoqualmie, ©1976.(OCoLC)6899081
found: Pembroke, T. An ethnohistorical report showing the presence of the Snohomish and Snoqualmie Indians prior to 1855, ancestors to the Tulalip Tribes, 1981.(OCoLC)51071060
found: Handbook of North American Indians, 1978- :v. 7, p. 487 (table lists 49 Southern Coast Salish tribes including Snoqualmie; Lushootseed treaty spelling: Snoqualmoo)
found: Encyclopedia of North American Indians, ©1996(under Puget Sound Tribes: Snoqualmie)
found: The Gale encyclopedia of Native American tribes, ©1998:v. 4, p. 471 (Snoqualmie; The Snoqualmie, also known as Snuqualmi, lived along the Snoqualmie River between the Skykomish River and what is now North Bend, Washington, east of Seattle; were roughly divided into four districts or bands: Tolt (now the town of Carnation, Washington), Fall City, Monroe, and North Bend; categorized as one of many Puget Sound tribes)