Hull— l»l>' 



210 [BTTI.T,. 187. 



Hungarian; criH'k, trihntary to South fork of the Koyuknk, near longitude 150°. 

 rrosi>ect()rs' name, reported by Schrader in 1899. 



Hungry; rrt-ek, tril)ntary to Oregon creek, from the .south, Seward peninsula. 

 Name from liarnard, 1900. 



lIiinniiKj. hay; see Hanning. 



Hunt; island, near western end of the Sandman reefs, south of Deer island and 

 nortiieast of Sannak. So called by the Fish Commission in 1888. This 

 may l)e Kgg (lachnoi) island of Te!)enkof, 1849. 



Hunt; i)eak (3,494 feet high), in tin- northeastern part of Kupreanof island, Alex- 

 ander archipelago. Named by Thomas, in 1887, after Ensign Henry J. 

 Hunt, U. S. N. 



Hunt; point, the western head of Rodgers harbor, on south shore of Wrangell island, 

 Arctic ocean. So named by Berry in September, 1881, after Ensign Henry 

 Jackson Hunt, U. S. N., a member of his party. 



Hunter; bay, in Prince of Wales island, opening into Cordova bay, Alexander archi- 

 pelago. Name published by the Coast Survey in 1899. 



Hunter; creek, tril)utary to Minook creek, from the east. Prospectors' name, pub- 

 lished by the Coast Survey in 1898. 



Hurtle; creek; tributary to Tonsina lake. Name from Schrader, 1900. 



Huskisson; mountain, in extreme northeastern Alaska. So named by Franklin, in 

 1826, after the "president of the board of trade." 



Huslia; river, tributary to the Koyukuk, from the west, near longitude 156° 30^. 

 Native name, reported by Allen, in 1885, as Hussliakatna, on his map 1 

 and 4, and Husliakakat in his text '^p. 105). See Kakat. 



Hut; point, on the mainland, the north point of entrance to Walker cove, Behm 

 canal, southeastern Alaska. So named by the Coast Survey in 1891. 



Hut; point, on the northwestern coast of Douglas island, at entrance to Gastineau 

 (channel, Alexander archipelago. So named by Symonds in 1880. There 

 were some Indian houses or huts on the point. 



Hut; point, on the southern shore of Afognak island, Kodiak group. Named Zhila 

 (hut, cabin, house) by Murashef in 1839-40. 



Ifiilcliinsoii, creek; see Quartz. 



Hutchinson; hill, on Northeast point, St. Paul island, Pribilof group, Bering sea. 

 Called Sealion by Dall, in 1874, which may be the local name. Later it 

 was called Hutchinson, after Hayward Malcolm Hutchinson, of the Alaska 

 Commercial Company. P^lliott speaks of it as the "volcanic nodule known 

 as Hutchinson's hill." 



Hutchinson; sunken reef, off Outer Spruce cape, Chiniak bay, Kodiak. Name 

 published by the Coast Survey in 1881. 



Hutshi; chain of lakes draining northward into the Lewes river in longitude 137°. 

 Native name, apparently first published by Glave in the Century, Septem- 

 ber and October, 1892, where it is spelled Hootchy-Eye. It has been 

 variously written Hootch Eye, Hootch-i, Hutchi, Hotchi, Huchai, etc. 

 The Canadian Board on Geographic Names has adopted the above form, 

 Hutshi. 



Huxley; peak (11,907 feet high), in the St. Elias alps, southeastern Alaska. So 

 named by Topham, in 1886, after Prof. Thomas Henry Huxley. 



Ilydah, cove; see IVIission. 



Ililden, canyon; see Heiden. 



Hydra; island, near the southern coast of Alaska peninsula, north of the Semidi 

 islands. Name published by Tebenkof in 1849. On a manuscript Russian 

 map, of 1849, it is called Zatschra island. Apparently identical with Otter 

 i.sland of Coast Survey chart 8500. 



labloshnie, island; see Middle. 



