Kut— Key. 



250 [Buix. 1S7 



Kohlbibil, river; see Kateel. 



h'litiliiul, cape; see Kettle. 



K'litfuxok; liarl)or. The anchorage at east end i)f KiUisnoo ( Kenasnow of Meade) island 

 was so called by Meade in 1869. Has also been called Koteosok creek. 

 The name appears to be obsolete. 



Kiitcotiok, island; see KiUisnoo. 



Kotlik; Eskimo village (population 31 in 1890), at the mouth of Kotlik river. An 

 Eskimo name which, according to Nelson, means breeches. It was, in 1878, 

 the fur-trading station for the district. 8o named to designate the junction 

 of two small streams. 



Kotlik; small river, in the Yukon delta, near Pastol bay. Named Kotlik (breeches) 

 by the P^skimo. 



Kotory, islands; see Pribilof. 



Kutsechekmaksh/, bay; see Kachemak. 



Kotsina; river, near Mount Wrangell, tributary to the Copper river, from the east 

 in latitude 61° 30^. Native name, reported by Peters in 1899. 



Kotsokotana, river; see Buckland. 



Kotusk, mountains; see Chilkoot. 



Kotzebue; sound, on the northern shore of Seward peninsula, Arctic ocean. Dis 

 covered, explored, and named by Kotzebue in August, 1816. He says. 

 "In compliance with the general wish of my companions, I called this 

 newly discovered sound by my own name, Kotzebue' s sound." 



Kou, island; see Kuiu. 



KoubougluikkJtli, cape; see Kubugakli. 



Kougrok, mining district, etc. ; see Kugruk. 



Koujalik, bay; see Kujulik. 



Koujulik, bay; see Kujulik. 



Kouknk, bay; see Kukak. 



Koukhat, cape; see Douglas. 



Koulagayakh, island; see Kuliugiak. 



Koulakh, lake; see Kulik. 



Koulichkow, bay; see Snipe. 



Koulitzkoff, rock; see Kulichkof. 



Koulugmid, cape; see Kuliuk. 



Koumloun, cape; see Kumliun. 



Koittznow, archipelago, etc. ; see Kootzuahoo. 



Kovrizhka; cape, forming the north head of Makushin bay, on the northwestern 

 shore of Unalaska, eastern Aleutians. Sarichef, 1792, called it Hatan, per- 

 haps from the Russian word hat (sea wall or dam), and the Russian Hydro- 

 graphic charts have Hattan. Veniaminof calls it Ermoshkinskie and 

 applies the name Kovrizhka to another point 12 miles farther south. It 

 is Makushin cajx (not Makushin point) of the Fish Commission, 1888. 

 Kovrizhka is Russian for a small loaf or gingerbread cake. 



Kovurof ; bay, indenting the northern shore of Atka, middle Aleutians. So named 

 by Ingenstrem or Lutke about 1830. Lutke calls it Koourovskaia. Has 

 also been called Kovurova. 



Eowak; river, tributary to Hotham inlet, Kotzebue sound. An Eskimo word, long 

 in use and variously spelled Kooak, Koowak, Kowuk. According to 

 Spurr it is Kubuk or Kuvuk, meaning great river. According to Allen it 

 is Holooatna or Kowak river. It has also been called Putnam or Kowak 

 river. 



Kvw-e-vok, village; see Kaviruk. 



Koyana; creek, west of Golofnin sound, Seward peninsula. Name from Barnard, 

 1900. 



