K 11— Kin. 



244 [BULL. 187. 



Kliarkof; island, one of the Siginaka group, .Sitka sound, Alexander archipelago. 

 Named Kliarkof (Clark) by Vasilief in 1809. 



Kliavakhan, inlet and village; see Klawak. 



Klikiiklik, ii-land; see Latouche. 



Kliiirhcf, peak; see Kliuchef. 



Klinkwan; Haida Indian village, near Hunters bay, Cordova bay, Alexander arehi- 

 pelago. Native name from the Coast Survey in 1900. 



Klinkwan; Haida Indian village, on the western .shore of Long island, Cordova 

 bay, Alexander archipelago. Native name, called Klinquan in the Elev- 

 enth Census, 1890, and Koianglas village by Sheldon Jackson in 1880. 



Kliuchef; mountain, near Hot Springs bay, Baranof island, Alexander archipelago. 

 Named Kliuchevaia (hot springs) by Vasilief in 1809. Has been called 

 Kliucheff or Springs mountain, a name recently transferred to another 

 near-by peak and spelled Klinchet. Erroneously, Klinchef. 



Kliuchef; volcano, in the northern part of Atka, middle Aleutians. Named Kliuch- 

 evskaia (springs) by the Russians, says Lutke, on account of the large 

 number of warm springs on its western slope. Variously written Kliout- 

 chevskoi, Kljutsehewskoj, etc. 



Klochkof; rock, 2 or 3 miles ENE. (by compass) from the eastern end of Amlia 

 island. Named after the pilot of the Kussian-American company's ship 

 Chirikof, who discovered it in 1818. It is Siuvich (sea lion) rock of the 

 natives. A manuscript note in Davidson's copy of Sarichef's atlas indi- 

 cates a rock aivasli here. The pilot Ingenstrem denies the existence of 

 :his rock. 



Klokachef; island, at the northern point of entrance to Salisbury sound, Alex- 

 ander archipelago. Name apparently first used on British Admiralty 

 chart 2337. Has also been called Fortuna island and Vincent island. 

 Klokachef is a Russian family name. 



Klokachef ; point, the southwesternmost point of Klokachef island, Salisbury sound, 

 Alexander archipelago. So named by Vasilief in 1833. Has also been 

 called Olga point. 



Klokachef, sound; see Salisbury. 



Klokerblok; river, tributary to the Niukluk river, from the west, in the Blake j 

 Recording district, Seward peninsula. The local rendition of some native 

 name, which is variously written Klokblok, Kluchablok, etc. \ 



Klondike; gold district, and river, tributary to the Yukon, from the east, near 

 latitude 64°. This river was named Deer river by the Western Union j 

 Telegraph Expedition, in 1867, and so appeared on various maps. Later ' 

 it was called Ralndeer and afterwards Reindeer. Ogilvie, writing Septent- i 

 ber 6, 1896, from Cudahy, says: "The river known here as the Klondike;" 

 and in a footnote says: "The correct name is Thron Duick." It has also 

 been called Clondyke and Cliandik, or Deer. 



Kloqudn, village; see Klukwan. 



Klotassin; river, tributary to the White, from the east, near latitude 62° 30'. Native 

 name, reported by Hayes in 1891. The above form, Klotassin, has been 

 adopted by the Canadian Board on Geographic Names. 



Klkujatan. This name is given by Petrof, 1880, as the name of a large lake southwest 

 of Fort Yukon. The lake was shown as an enlargement of Birch creek 

 on some maps. All late maps omit it. 



Klu; i-iver, tributary to the Chakina, from the west. Apparently so called by the 

 prospectors. 



Kluane; lake and river, flowing therefrom to the Donjek river, near latitude (>1° 30^. 

 Native name, reported by Hayes, in 1891, as Kluantu river, the termination 



