Gol— Goo. 



138 [BULL. 187. 



Goldengate; creek, tributary to Kruzgamepa river, from the west, Seward penin- 

 sula. Name from Barnard, 1900. 



Qolofnin; bay and sountl, on north shore of Norton sound, Bering sea. Discovered, 

 ' in 1821, by Khromehenko, who named it after his vessel, the brig Golofnin, 

 which in turn had been named after Capt. Vasili Mikhailovich Golofnin, 

 of the Russian navy. In Roman letters this name has been written 

 Golovnine and Golofnin. The native name is said to be Tatchik. A large 

 and shallow sound stretches inland from the bay. This inner bay the 

 Russians, it is reported, called Sun Golovine or Golovine sound. The 

 name Golofnin is here applied to both the inner part, the sound, and the 

 outer part, the bay. 



fSolofuin, point; see Hope. 



Goloi; island, between Inner Iliasik and Dolgoi islands, near Belkofski. Named 

 Goloi (bare) by Veniaminof. 



Goloi, island; see Aektok. 



Goloi, island; see Kalibri. 



Goloi, island; see Long. 



Goloi, island, point, etc. ; see Bare. 



Goloi; islands, in the northeastern part of Salisbury sound, Alexander archipelago. 

 Named Goloi (bare) by the Russians. 



Goloi; islands, one of the Necker group, Sitka sound, Alexander archipelago. Named 

 Goloi (bare) by Vasilief in 1809. 



Goloi, islands; see Passage. 



Goloi; islet, near Kruzof island, in entrance to Sitka sound, Alexander archipelago. 

 Named Goloi (bare) by Vasilief in 1809. 



Goloi, islet; see Bush Top. 



Golova, cape; see Head. 



Golora, cape; see Mountain. 



Golovni; island, one of the Necker group, Sitka sound, Alexander archipelago. 

 Named Golomiannoi (sea breeze) by Vasilief in 1809. Has also been 

 written Golomi, which, according to George Kostrometinoff, U. S. Court 

 Interpreter at Sitka, is a corruption of the Russian Golovni or Golovni^ 

 (fire-brand). 



Golsova; river, debouching in the southeastern part of Norton sound. Dall, 1866, 

 calls it Golsova and Nelson, 1879, Goltzovaia, obviously two forms of the 

 same word. Perhaps from the German holtz (wood). Tebenkof uses the 

 native name Negvelnuk. 



Goltsovaia, bay; see Holtz. 



Gomair, lake; see Gumaer. 



Good; island, in Gambler bay. Admiralty island, Alexander archipelago. So named 

 ])y Mansfield in 1889. 



Good; island, in the Yukon river, about 4 miles below the mouth of Soonkakat 

 river. Name published by the Coast Survey in 1898. 



Goodhope; bay, in the southeastern part of Kotzebue sound, Arctic ocean. So 

 named by Kotzebue in August, 1816, because here he had "good hope" 

 of making important geographic discoveries. 



Goodman, glacier; see Goodwin. 



Goodnews; bay, indenting the mainland coast a little south of the mouth of the 

 Kuskokwim river. Called by Sarichef, 1826, port Dobriek Vestei (good 

 news) or Imakpiguak bay. Lutke, following this, calls it Bonnes Nou- 

 velies bale, and adds, "it might better be called the hay of false reports." 

 It was visited and probably named Good News by the land expedition of 

 Ustiugof and Korsakof of 1818-19. 



Goodpaster; river, trilmtary to the Tanana, from the east, in latitude 64°. So 

 nuiiic<l by Allen, in 1885, after the Goodpaster family of Kentucky. 



