Bou— Boi 



1 04 [biti.i.. 187. 



Boat Harbor; point, Ixmiij: mw ..f the heads of Boat harbor, near Cape Fox, Alex- 

 ander arcliipeUifro. t^<> culled hv Meade in 1869. 



liahrnf, l)ank, ete. ; see Sea Otter. 



Ji,>hr<>/, island, hi'tween Kanajra and Tanaga; see Sea Otter. 



Jiiihrof, island; see Beaver. 



Jdthrin-u; point, Krn/.of island; .«ee Beaver. 



Jiohroi'oi, bay; see Otter. 



liiihrovo'i, bay, cove, etc. ; see Beaver. 



Bobrovoi; jioint, near south end of Baranof island, the southern poiijt of entrance 

 to Larch bay, Alexander archipelago. Named Bobrovoi (sea otter) by the 

 Russians. 



Bohrorxkoi, mountain; see Beaver. 



Boca de Quadra; canal ( )r fiord, indenting the mainland coast of southeastern Alaska, 

 east of Kevillagigedo channel, Alexander archipelago. Apj)arently so 

 named by Caiimano in 1792. Has also been called Quadra bay and 

 Quadra channel. Boca de Quadra is Spanish for channel or passage of 

 Quadra, i. e., Quadra's channel. 



Boca Fina; see Bocas de Finas. 



Bocas; point, in Port Refugio, Bucareli bay, Prince of Wales archipelago. Named 

 Punta de las Bocas (point of the mouths) by Maurelle and Quadra in 

 1775-1779. 



Bnrax <!(• ArruKja; see Arriaga. 



Bocas de Finas; a name applied by early Spanish exj^lorers to the unexplored inlets 

 or bays at the extreme northern part of Bucareli bay, where their explo- 

 rations ended. The name appears to have intended the commemoration of 

 the fact. Termination bays or inlets would seem to be the meaning. Has 

 also been called Boca Fina. 



Bocas del Almirante. Some unexplored inlets on the north shore of Bucareli bay, 

 Prince of Wales archipelago, were so designated by Maurelle and Quadra 

 1775-1779. 



Bocharojf, lake; see Becharof. 



BorJinnoff, lake; see Becharof. 



Bock; bight, in Thomas bay, eastern coast of Frederick sound, Alexander archipel- 

 ago. So named by Thomas in 1887. 



Bog; cape, between Protection bay and Three Island bay, on south shore Qf Unalaska, 

 eastern Aleutians. So called by the Fish Commission in 1888. It is 

 lanaliun or Yanaliun of Tebenkof, 1849, and Alexander of the Coast 

 Survey in 1900. 



Boga Slov, hiW; see Bogoslof. ' 



Bogert; point, on eastern shore of Port Snettisham, Stephens passage, Alexander^ 

 ari'hipelago. So named by Thomas in 1888. 



Bogoslof; hill (591 feet high), on St. Paul island, Pribilof group, Bering sea. Called 

 Bogosluff mountain by the Coast Survey. II. W. Elliott calls it Boga slov. 

 and adds Boga s\o\ or word of God, indefinite in its application to "the 

 place, but is, perhaps, due to the fact that the pious Russians, immediately 

 after landing at Zapadnie, in 1787, ascended the hill and erected a hug$ 

 cross thereon." 



Bogoslof; V(jlcanic island,, in Bering sea, about 25 miles north of the western end 

 of Unalaska. This island rose fnjm the sea May 18, 1796, St. Johns Day, 

 and received from the Russians the name Joanna Bogoslova, or John the 

 Theologian's island. It has been called Bogoslov, Johann Bogoslow, St. 

 Jean Bogosloff, etc. Its native name, according to Grewingk, is Agafih 

 chagoch, or, as it may be written, Agashagok. In 1883 a new volcanic 

 island rose near this one, which is accordinglv now called Old Bogoslof. 



