BAKER, J 818 Oss— OtII. 



Ossipee; cliannel, between Bushy and Shnihby islands of the Kashevarof group, 

 L'larence strait, Alexander arcliii)elajro. Named by the Coast Survey, in 

 1895, after the V. S. S. Ossipn'. 



Ostoria, island; see Otstoia. 



Otitniia, mountain; see Barometer. 



Osfrorkd, cape; see Islet. 



Ostrorkl, islands; see Pribijoi. 



Otai, mountain; see Alai. 



Otclwredm, point; see Acheredin. 



Otkidwik, village; see Utkiavi. 



OtiiKi, island; see Attn. 



Oliiii'li, cape, etc.; .see Shoal. 



Otmeloi; island, in Yakutat ))ay, .southeastern Alaska. Named Otmeloi (shoal) l)y 

 Tebenkof in 1S49. Tliere is a shoal extending off from the island. Also 

 called Shoals island. 



Olmi'loi vnieshnie, point; see Shoals. 



OlineJoi vnntrennie, point; see Inner. 



Oiok-kol-, village; see Otukah. 



Otriiliixtoi, vsipe; see Bluff. 



Otstoia; island, opposite Hooniah sound, in Peril strait, Alexander art^hipelago. 

 Named Otstoia (off-lying) by N'asilief in I800. Also called Ostovia and 

 sometimes translated dixtdnl. (Tcorge Kostrometinoff calls this Otstoi 

 (shelter). 



Otter; bay, indenting the southern shore of Alaska peninsula, northwest from the 

 Shumagin group. It is Bobrovoi (beaver) bay of Tebenkof, 1849, and 

 Otter l)ay of later charts. On some charts Otter hay is shown as a small 

 bay indenting the western shore of Portage bay. 



Otter: creek, tributary to Nome river, near its mouth, in the Nome mining region, 

 Seward jteninsula. Prospectors' name, published in 1900. 



Otter; island, one of the Pribilof group, Bering sea. So called T)y the Russians, as 

 early as 1816, and probably earlier. Kotzebue has, in the English text, 

 Bober. Lutke calls it Bobrovi (des loutres), and the Russian charts gen- 

 erally Bobrovoi (sea otter). Now well known as Otter Island. 



Otter, island; see Hydra. 



Otter; sound, in the western part of Prince of Wales archipelago. Meares, in 1788, 

 named some body of water in this vicinity and which can not now be 

 identified with certainty, "Sea-Otter Harbour," which he writes Sea- 

 (jtter, Sea Otter, and on his charts calls it Harbour and Sound. In the 

 Coast Pilot of 1869, by Davidson, this is called Otter sound. 



Otter; strait, between Bird and Chernobour islands, Shumagin grouj). So named 

 by Dallin 1882. 



Otters, Sea of; .see Bering. 



OttOTvay; valley, on the north border of Klutina lake. So named by Abercrond)ie 

 in 1898. 



Otukah.; Eskimo village, on the Arctic coast, at or near Icy cape. Eskimo name, 

 from Petrof, 1880, who wrote it Otok-kok. Has also been written Ootoo- 

 kok. Russian Hydrographic chart 1495, dated 1854, shows a settlenient 

 here called Kaiakishvig-miut. According to Murdoch, the name is O-tu- 

 kah [mun]. Population 50 in 1880. 



Otukah.; river, in northwestern Alaska, debouching between Point Laj'^ and Icy 

 cape. Eskimo name, published by the Coast Survey, in 1899, as Ootokok. 



Otumg-wilut; creek, tributary to Kanektok river, from the north, about 50 miles 

 east of Kuskokwim bay, western Alaska. Native name, obtained by 

 Spun- and Post, of the Geological Survey, in 1898, and by them written 

 Otiimgwilute. 



