BAKER. J 245 KlU— KUO. 



Kluane — Ci mtinued. 



ta lueauing river. The name has also been written Khiahne. The above 

 form, Khiane, as applied to Ixtth lake and river, has been adopted bj^ the 

 Canadian Board on Geographic Names. This is, doubtless, the lake called 

 by Glave (Century, Oct., 1892, p. 877) Tioo Amy. Possibly, also, this may 

 be Ta-ku-ten-ny-ee of Davidson. 



Klvantu; see Kluane. 



Kltichablok, river; see Klokerblok. 



Kiuchev, bay; see Hot Springs. 



Khichev, lake; see Deep. 



Klukwan; village, near the mouth of Chilkat river. Native name, first reported 

 by naval officers, in 1880, as Chilkat or Klukquan. Krause, in 1882, calls it 

 Kloquan. Has also been written Klakwan. The above form, Klukwan, 

 has been adopted by the Canadian Board on Geographic Names. 



Klutina; glacier, extending from Valdes Summit down inland to the headwaters 

 of the Klutina river. Native name, which has generally been written 

 Klutena. 



Klutina; lake, about 40 miles north of Valdes, Prince William sound. Native-name, 

 adopted by the several hundred earliest prospectors camped at the lake 

 in the season of 1898; has also been called Abercrombie lake. Generally 

 written Klutena. 



Klutina; river, draining from Klutina lake, northeastward to the Copper river. 

 Native name, reported by Allen, in 1885, as Klatena, i. e., Klati river. 

 Generally written Klutena. 



Klutlan; glacier, and river, draining from it northward to the White river in longi- 

 tude 141°. Native name, reported by Brooks in 1899. 



Kluvesna; creek, tributary to the Kotsina, from the north, draining from Kluvesna 

 glacier. Native name, from manuscript map made by prospectors in 1900. 



Kluvesna; glacier, on southern flank of Mount Wrangell. Native name, from the 

 prospectors, 1900. 



Knakatnuk; Indian village, on the northern shore of Knik arm of Cook inlet. 

 Native name, reported by Petrof in 1880. 



Knecktukhnut, village; see Chiukak. 



Kneep, arm, river, etc. ; see Knik. 



Knetina; river, tributary to the Copper river, from the east, in latitude 62°. Native 

 name, from Abercrombie, 1898, who wrote it Knetena. 



Knight; island, in the western part of Prince William sound. Named Kniglits 

 island by the Coast Survey in 1869. 



Knight; island, in Yakutat bay, southeastern Alaska. So named by Vancouver in 

 1794. It is Dalnie (distant) island of Tebenkof, 1849. Has also been writ- 

 ten Dalni. 



Knik; arm, river, and village at the head of Cook inlet. Knik is the Eskimo word 

 iorfire. It has been printed Kinik, Kneep, Knick, Knik, Kook, Knuyk, 

 Kweek, etc. 



Kniktag-miut, village; see Ignituk. 



Knob; mountain (4,250 feet high) , near the eastern bank of the Stikine river. So 

 named by the Coast Survey in 1895. 



Knowles; creek, tributary to the Koyuk, from the north, Seward peninsula. So 

 called by Peters in 1900. 



Knowles; head, on the northeastern shore of Prince William sound. So named by 

 Abercrombie in 1898. 



Knox; peak, in the Teocalli mountains, near headwaters of the Kuskokwim. So 

 named by Spurr and Post in 1898. 



