B.vKKR.] 223 jou— Kar. 



Jdiiis, river; see Yahtse. 



.Iiiiimikh, islet; see Unak. 



Jude; island (100 feet high), west of Unga, .Slmmagiii group. Named by the Rus- 

 sians after the apostle. 



Judy; hill (631 feet high), in the eastern part of Gravina island, Alexander an-hi- 

 pelago. So named by Clover in 1885. 



Jug; island, in Kalsin bay, Chiniak bay, Kodiak. Named Kubieshka (jug) by Rus- 

 sian naval officers in 1808-1810. 



Jug-; island, in the southern part of the Necker group, Sitka sound, Alexander 

 archipelago. Named Kubieshka (jug) by Yasilief in 1809. 



Jiikchann, river; see Yukon. 



Jinid, river; see Yukon. 



jHnii.'<k(i, island; see Yunaska. 



Juneau; city, harbor, and island, southeastern Alaska. " Two prospectors, Harris 

 and Juneau, found mineral here, in 1880, and soon afterwards a camp was 

 located." This camp, it is said, was named Harrisburg and the district 

 Juneau. United States naval officers reconnoitered the harbor about this 

 time, and called the camp Rockwell, after Commander Charles H. Rock- 

 well, U. S. N. Owing to the resulting confusion in names, the residents 

 held a town meeting and adopted the name Juneau. A post-office, called 

 Juneau, was established here in April, 1881. 



Juneau; creek, tributary to Kenai river, Kenai peninsula. Local name, puy>lished 

 in 1899. 



Junior; creek, tributary to iMills creek, from the east, Kenai peninsula. Local 

 name, from Becker, 1895. 



Juno; mountain, in the western part of Revillagigedo island, Alexander archipelago. 

 So named by Nichols in 1883. 



Just; island, at entrance to Willard inlet, northeast of Dixon entrance. Name pub- 

 lished by the Coast Survey in 1899. 



Eaatl; river, tributary to the Chilkat river, from the east. Native name, reported 

 by LTnited States naval officers in 1880. 



Kabakof; bay, indenting the southern coast of Atka, middle Aleutians. So named 

 by the Russian-American Company's pilot Ingenstrem, about 1830. 



Kahhalcher, cape; see Kaphalsek. 



Kabuch; point, the southwesternmost point of Alaska peninsula. Called Khaboutcha 

 l)y Lutke, 1835, and Khabuch by Tebenkof, 1849. Apparently a native 

 name. It is probably identical with Alaska cape of Billings, 1790. 



Knrhek, island; see Middleton. 



Kachcl, island; in Kaiuchali. 



Kachemak; bay, indenting the eastern shore of Cook inlet. It is Chugachik or 

 Kachekmak of the Russians. Tikhmenief has Kachetmakskaia. Gre- 

 wingk has Kotschekmaksky, and it has been often written Kachekmak. 



Kachiginskaia, bay; see Kashega. 



Kdchkahin, river; see Chilkoot. 



Kach-khanna, island; see Wrangell. 



Kadiak, bay; see Camp Coogan. 



Kadin; island, on the southern edge of the Stikine flats, Sumner strait, Alexander 

 archipelago. Named by the Russian surveying party on the R>/n<ia, in 

 1863, "after the veteran pilot, M. I\L Kadin, a native of the Aleutian 

 islands, and who drew, at Sitka, the charts contained in Tebienkof's atlas." 



Kadugin, islands; see Pavlof. 



Kadngnak, cape; see Kudugnak. 



Kaflia; bay, near Kukak bay, on the north shore of Shelikof strait. Named Kaflia 

 (Dutch tile) by Yasilief in 1831. Lutke, 1835, wrote it Katia. 



