11. The Bois Forte Indian Reservation is an Indian reservation established for the Zagaakwaandagowininiwag (meaning "man of the jungle"). The total land area of the reserve is 516.974 square kilometers. It has a population of 984 people.
12. Bridgeport Indian Reservation, California, formerly known as Bridgeport Paiute Indian Colony in Bridgeport, California, is a federally recognized northern Paiute Indian tribe in Mono County, California, United States. The reservation is located in Mono County, California, with an area of 0.29 square kilometers and a population of 120 people.
13. Burns Paiute Indian Colony, Oregon The Burns Paiute Tribe is a federally recognized Northern Paiute Native American tribe in Harney County, Oregon, United States. Members of this tribe are mainly descendants of the Northern Ute Wadatica people, who traditionally live in central and southern Oregon and live as hunter-gatherers. The Northern Paiutes congregate in and around Burns, Oregon, an area that was assigned to the tribe in 1897. It has an area of 55.59 square kilometers and a population of 349 people.
14. The Campbell Ranch of Yerington Colony and Campbell Ranch is a federally recognized tribe of Northern Paiute Indians in western Nevada. The Yerington Paiute Tribe owns a reservation in Lyon County, Nevada, the Yerington Reservation and Trust Lands. The reserve was established in 1916 and covers an area of 6.69 square kilometers. It has a population of 659 people.
15. The Campo Indian Reservation is home to the Campo Dignonio Mission Indians, also known as the Campo Cumeya Nation, a federally recognized Cumeaí tribe located south of the Laguna Mountains in eastern San Diego County, California. The reserve was established in 1893 and covers an area of 66.82 square kilometers. It has a population of 362 people.
16. The Carson Colonies of Nevada and California are federally recognized Washoe Indian tribes residing in California and Nevada. There are several Washaw communities to the south and east of Lake Tahoe, which are managed by tribal councils. The Washo people have more than 260 square kilometers of reserves. It has a population of 1,116 people.
17. The Cheyenne River Reservation is located in San Bernardino County, California, 40 kilometers from Lake Hasselblad and along the Colorado River. The reserve has an area of 124.7 square kilometers and a population of 345.
18. The Chitimacha Reservation belongs to the Chitimacha people in the woodlands of southeast Louisiana. They are federally recognized tribes, the Chitimacha Tribe of Louisiana. The Chitimacha people own an Indian reservation in the parish of St. Mary's, near Charenton, in Bayou Teche. Their reservations are a small part of the territory they had before they came into contact. They are the only tribe in Louisiana that still controls part of the original lands, and they have long occupied the area of the Achafaraya Basin, "one of the richest inland estuaries on the continent." It covers an area of 1.82 square kilometers and has a population of about 1,100 people.
19. The Cocopah Reservation is a federally recognized reservation of the Cocopah Indian Tribe. The reservation is 25.948 square kilometers and consists of three non-contiguous parts of Yuma County, Arizona, located in the northwest, southwest, and south of Yuma City, Arizona, with a permanent population of 1,025 people, the larger part bordering the Colorado River, located west of Somerton, a suburb of Yuma, and the other part east of Somerton. There is a casino on the reservation.
20. The Colorado River Indian Reservation is a federally recognized Indian reservation made up of four distinct ethnic groups associated with the Colorado River Indian Reservation: the Mojavi, the Chemehuevi, the Hopi, and the Navajo. It covers an area of 1,202.13 square kilometers and currently has a total population of 9,485 people on the tribal reservation.