The Geier Indians or Geies[2] were an 18th-century group of Indigenous people in what became Mexico and the United States.
[1] In 1675, a Native group, recorded as the Papuliquier (a combination of the names Pacpul and Geier) visited a Spanish town of Monclova, Coahuila.
[1] The Franciscan priest Damián Massanet wrote that the Geier and five other Native groups had camped along the Frio River, near San Antonio in 1690.
[1] Damián Massanet reported that the Geier spoke the Coahuiltecan language.
[1] This article relating to the Indigenous peoples of North America is a stub.