found: Work cat.: Jack, F. A practical alphabet for Central Pomo (Hopland dialect), c1982.
found: Ethnologue.com, via WWW, Oct. 6, 2006(Pomo, Central; region: Clear Lake area, Northern California; alternate names: Ballo-Kai-Pomo, Cabanapo, Habenapo, H'hana, Kábinapek, Khabenapo, Khana, Kulanapan, Kulanapo, Venaambakaia, Venambakaiia, Yokaia; dialects: Point Arena, Hopland, Ukiah; classification: Hokan, Northern, Pomo, Russian River and Eastern, Russian River, Southern)
found: Hodge handbk. No. Am. Ind.:pp. 276-77 (Pomo (Cabanapo, Habenapo, Kabinapok, Khabenapo, Kalanapan, Kulanapan, Kulanapo, Venambakaiia))
found: Native languages of the Americas, via WWW, Oct. 6, 2006:Pomo (Pomoan) (Pomo (Yakaya, Yokaia, Shanel, Kábinapek). The Pomo languages are considered by many linguists to be part of the Hokan family of languages. There were once seven distinct Pomo languages, as different from one another as the Romance languages of Europe; today the only Pomoan languages with more than a few elderly speakers are Kashaya and Central Pomo)
notfound: Britannica online, Oct. 6, 2006;Columbia encyclopedia, via WWW, Oct. 6, 2006