<ol— Col. 



134 [Hri.i..is- 



Cofiinan; island, near Coffman cove, at southern entrance to Kashevarof passage, 

 Alexander archipelago. Named by Snow in 1886. 



Coghlan; island (4o0 feet high), near the western entrance to Gastineau channel, 

 Alexander archij^elago. Named by the Coast Survey, in 1885, after Com- 

 mander Joseph Bullock Coghlan, U. S. N. Erroneously Coglan. 



Cogrua, river; see Kugrua. | 



Vogtua, river; see Meade. 



Cohen; island, in Favorite channel, Lynn canal, Alexander archipelago. Named 

 by the Coast Survey in 1893. 



Cohen; island, on southern shore of Kachemak bay, Cook inlet. Named by Dall, in 

 1880, after a trader of that name stationed in Cook inlet at that time. 



Cohen; reef, in Favorite channel, Lynn canal, Alexander archipelago. So named 

 by Coghlan in 1884. 



Cohoes; creek, in the southern part of the St. Elias alps, southeastern Alaska. Name 

 published by the Coast Survey in 1889. 



Coke; point, the northern point of entrance to Holkham bay, Stephens p9.ssage, 

 Alexander archipelago. Named by Vancouver in 1794. 



Cold; bay, indenting the southern shore of Alaska peninsula, just west of Belkofski. 

 Named Morozovskie or Morozova (cold, frozen) by the Russians. Has 

 been called Cold, Frozen, ]Morozoffski, etc. i 



Cold; bay, on southern shore of Alaska peninsula, west of Kodiak. Named Stude- ; 

 naia (cold, freezing) by the Russians on account of the cold winds which i 

 draw through a deep ravine or gorge from Becharof lake. The native j 

 name appears to be Puale. Variously called Studenaja, Puale, Pouale, ! 

 and, erroneously, Stulchena. I 



Coldera, port; see Caldera. 



Coleen; mountain, on north bank of the Yukon, near mouth of the Coleen river. 

 So called by the Coast Survey in 1895. 



Coleen; river, tributary to the Porcupine, from the north, between the upper and 

 lower Ramparts of the Porcupine. So called by the Coast Survey in 1895. 



Coleman, point; see Thatcher. 



Coleman; reef or shoal in Chatham strait, off Thatcher point, near the eastern end I 

 of Peril strait, Alexander archipelago. So named by Dall in the Coast I 

 Pilot in 1883. The name Coleman had been given by Homfray, in 1867, 

 to the adjacent point, now called Thatcher. 



College; fiord, in Port Wells, Prince William somid. So named by the Harriman 

 Expedition in 1899. 



Collie; point, on the Arctic coast, at entrance to Wainwright inlet. Named by i 

 Beechey, in 1826, after his surgeon, Alex. Collie. Called Kalidge on 

 Russian Hydrographic chart 1495. Perhajis this comes from an errone- 

 ous transliteration of Collie into Russian. 



Colling; mountains (3,000 to 4,000 feet high), on the eastern shore of Portland 

 canal. Called Colling range by Pender in 1868. 



CoUinson; point, near Camden bay, on the Arctic coast, about 4° west of the inter- 

 national boundary. Capt. Richard Collinson, R. N., of Her Majesty's 

 ship Enterprise, wintered here in 1853-4, whence the name. 



Colmondeley, sound; see Cholmondelej'. 



Colorado; creek, tributary to Cripple creek, in the Nome mining region, Seward 

 peninsula. Prospectors' name published in 1900. Identical with Dog 

 creek or Ryan creek of the Davidson-Blakeslee map of 1900. 



Colorado; creek, tributary to Klokerblok river, from the south, Seward peninsula. 

 Name from Barnard, 1900. 



Colorado; creek, tributary to Mission creek, from the south, in the Eagle mining 

 region. Local name, published in 1899. 



