Kll-Kln. 



240 [BULI,. 187. 



Kiliuda; l>ay, indenting the southeastern shore of Kodiak. Native name, n-iwrtedby 

 the Russians. Has been written Kiliouda, Kiliouk, Kiliuda, Kihiidinskoi, 

 Kiliuk, KiUuda, Kiluden, etc. Perhaps it is a corruption of Kfliak, an 

 Aleut word meaning morniny, or Kiliak, early hi. the moridnfj, and uda, 

 Lay. 



Kiliuda; native village, on the north shore of Kiliuda Imy, Kodiak. Has been gen- 

 erally written Kiliuda. 



Kill III id; bay; see Kuliliak. 



Kllhil. Petrof, 1880, shows two native villages on the headwaters of the Kok river, 

 northern Alaska, designated as Killaimutes, i. e., Kilai people. 



Killisnoo; island, opposite Peril strait, in Chatham strait, Alexander archipelago. 

 Corruption of some native word. Apparently only another form of 

 Kootznahoo (Khutz-n'hu = bear fort). It is identical with Kenasnow 

 island of Meade in 1869. Speaking of this island and the liarljor east of 

 it, etc., Meade says: "The names Kenasnow and Koteosok are the Indian 

 names of these places, and as such I have inserted them on my charts." 



Killisnoo; post-office and native village, on or near Killisnoo island, Chatham 

 strait, Alexander archipelago. The post-office was established here in 

 July, 1884. 



Killisnoo; reef, off west end of Killisnoo island, Chatham strait, Alexander archi- 

 pelago. Named Kenasnow by Meade, in 1869. On late charts changed to 

 Killisnoo. 



Kilxkvihii; creek, tributary to Kruzgamepa river, from the east, Seward peninsula. 

 So named by Brooks, in 1900, after his cook, Charles Kuhn. 



Kiliuda, village; see Kiliuda. 



Kilokak; rocks, near Agripin bay, on the southern shore of Alaska peninsula. I 

 Native name, published by the Coast Survey in 1900. 



Kiliii'lii/.fkoi, bay; see Kiliuda. 



Kimball; mountain (10,000 feet high), south of the Tanana river, near longitude 

 145°. So named by Allen in 1885. 



Kimball; pass, west of the Copper river, in latitude 61° 30^. Name from Aber- 

 crombie in 1898. 



Kinak; Eskimo village, on right bank of the lower Kuskokwim. Visited by Nel- ; 

 son in January, 1879, who reported its native name to Ije Kinagamiut, 

 i. e., Kinak people. Its population was at that time al)out 175. Popula- 

 tion in 1880, 60; 1890, 257. Kinak is said to be the Eskimo word iorface. i 



Kinak; river, on the mainland, east of Nunivak, draining from Dall lake, south- 

 ward to Bering sea. Native name, from Nelson, 1878. According to 

 J. H. Kilbuck, the word means face. Late niaps show the Kinak river 

 flowing not southward to the sea, but eastward to the Kuskokwim. 



Kinegnagmiut, village; see Razboinski. 



Kinegnak; Eskimo village, of 76 people in 1890, near Cape Newenham, Bering sea. 

 Name from the Eleventh Census, where it is Kinegnagmiut in the text 

 (p. 99) and Kniegnagamute on the map, i. e., Kinegnak people. 



King, cove; see Peterson bay and Salmon bay. 



King George Third's ardiipelago. That part of the Alexander archipelago wliich 

 lies west of Chatham strait and south of Cross sound and Icy strait was 

 named by Vancouver King George Third's archipelago. The name j 

 is obsolete. 



King; island (700 feet high), in Bering strait. Discovered by Cook, August 6, 1778, j 

 and named by him King's island, after Lieut. James King, a member of [i 

 his party. Its native name, according to Nelson, is U kiwuk, a name which j 

 has been given as Okiben, Oo-ghe-book, Oo-ghee-a-book, Ookivok, Oukivok, 

 Ukivok, etc. 



