BAKKK.] :^|7 I'as-Hav. 



Pasco; creek, tributary to Middle Inrk of tlie Koynknk, Iron: the H)ntli, lu-ar lati- 

 tude 67°. Prospeetors' name, from Schrader, IS*)!*. 

 Paso; i-oint, in Uinnak strait, near the western end of Unalawka, eastern Aleutian.-^. 



So named by the Fish (~!ommission in 1888. 

 Pass; creek, tributary to the Kotsina, from the south. Descriptive name, iriven by 



Schrader in 1900. 

 Passage; canal, or arm, in the northwestern part of Prince William sound, from 



which there is a portage to Turnagain arm of Cook inlet. Called Passage 



channel by Vancouver in 1794. Has recently been called Portage bay. 

 Passag-e; group of islands, at entrance to Middle channel into Sitka harbor, Sitka 



sound, Alexander archipelago. Named Prokhoda (passage) by Vasilief 



in 1809. Hasalso been written Prokodi. Tebenkof calls them Goloi (bare). 

 Passage; island, in Graham harbor, Cook inlet. So named by Portlock in 178(>. 

 Passage; island, northeast from Sannak, between Deer island and the Sandman 



reefs. So called Vjy the Fish (-onmiission in 1888. 

 Passage; islet and point, in Mitchell bay, Kootznahoo inlet. Admiralty island, 



Alexander archipelago. So named by Meade in 1869. 

 Passage; islet, between Kodiak and Spruce islands, Kodiak trroup. Named 



Prikhoda (passage) by Tebenkof in 1849. 

 Passage; rock, near the entrance to Tongass harbor, Alexander arclii})elago. So 



named by Nichols in the Coast Pilot (1891, p. 79). 

 Passage; sunken rock, in the entrance to Lituya bay, southeastern Alaska. So 



named by Dall in 1874. 

 Pastol; open bay, between St. Micliael and the main mouth of the Yukon. Eskimo 



name, from the Russians, 1852. Also written Pastole, Pastoli, and Pas- 



tolik. 

 Pastoliak; Eskimo village, on the right bank of the Postoliak river, a few miles 



above its mouth, on southern shore of Norton sound. Native name, from 



Tebenkof, 1849. It is, or rather was, for it is not shown on late maps, a 



few miles north of Pastolik, with which it should not be confounded. 



Dall writes it Pastoliiik. 

 Pastoliak; river, tributary to Pastol bay, Norton sound, western Alaska. Eskimo 



name, from Tebenkof, 1849. 

 Pastolik; Eskimo village, on the right bank of the Pastolik river, a few miles above 



its mouth. Population in 1890, 113. 

 Pastolik; river, tributary to Pastol 1)ay, western Alaska. Called Pastol by TclH'ukof, 



1849. Eskimo name, pronounced Pas-to-lik. 

 Patterson; bay, on the southeastern shore of Baranof island, Chatham stniit, .Vlex- 



ander archipelago. Named by the Coast Survey, after its surveying 



steamer Patter sov. 

 Patterson; glacier, on the mainlaml, east of Frederick sound, soutlieastern Alaska. 



So named by Dall, in 1879, after Carlile Pollock Patterson, the then 



Superintendent of the Coast Survey. 

 Patterson; island, in the entrance to Kasaan l)ay, Clarence strait, Alexander archi- 

 pelago. So named by Clover, in 1885, after the Coast Survey steamer 



Patterson. 

 Patterson; peaks (4,746 and 4,848 feet high), near Patterson glacier, southeastern 



Alaska. So named by Thomas in 1887. 

 Paul; island, off tlie southern shore of Alaska peninsula, nortlu-ast ot the Shuinagins. 



Named St. Paul by Woronkofski in 1887. 

 Pavlof; active volcano, on the Alaskan peninsula, west of the Shumagins. Named 



Pavlof (Paul or St. Paul) by the Russians. 

 Pavlof; bay, indenting the southern shore of Alaska peninsula, west of the Shuma- 

 gins. Named Pavlofskie (Paul) by the Russians. Variously s.i.elled. 



Its Aleut name is Tachik or Tatschik. 



