Fav-IVI. 



318 



Pavlof; ^'nmi> ni islaiKls, near Hclkot'ski, consist injj: of Loiiir, (ioloi (l>arc), I'koliioi 



(coah. r«)|u'nH'hii()i (crosswise), and Wosnesenski. Its Aleut name, 



according: to Veniaininof, is Kadugin (narrow). 

 Pavlof; liarl>or, indenting the northern coast of Sannak. C^alled ravioli' l>y tlie 



Fisli (Vnuniission in 1888. Also designated "Cove." 

 Pavlof; iiarltor, in Fresiiwatcr bay. C'hichagof island, ("hathani strait, Alexander 



archipelago. Named Pavlof (Paul) by Tebenkof in 1849. Has also been 



called Pablof and, erroneously. Parlor. Its native name is said to be 



Nasanki. Meade, in 1869, made a sketch of it and published it with the 



name Freshwater bay. This name Freshwater i-~ now applied to the 



whole inlet and Pavlof to the anchorage within it. See Freshwater. 

 Pavlof; village, at Selenie point, Pavlof bay, Alaska peninsula. Called Pavlovsk l)y 



Petrof in 1880. 

 Porlorsk; village; see Selenie, i)oint. 

 I'diiiirskaia, village; see Kenai. 

 I'orlovsiH, town; see Kodiak. 

 Pawik; Eskimo village, on the eastern side of Bristol l)ay, Bering sea. Also 



written Pawig. The name Pawik was obtained l)y Spurr and Post, in 



1898, from Fritz Blando, a resident. Apparently this is the Pakwik of the 



Eleventh Census, 1890. 

 Peabody; mountains (4,000 to 5,000 feet high), on the western shore of Portland 



canal. So named by Pender in 1868. 

 Pea,cock; creek, tributary to the Kotsina, from the south. Apparently a prosi)et-tors' 



name, reported by Schrader in 1900. 

 Peak; point, on the north shore of St. Matthew island, neai- its eastern end. Named 



Pik (peak) by Sarichef in his atlas of 1826. 

 Peaked; island, off the western end of Attn island, western Aleutians. A])i)arently 



so named by Gibson in 1855. 

 Peard; cliff, on the southern shore of Peard bay, Arctic coast. Presumaldy so called 



l)y the British Admiralty as early as 1855. 

 Peard; open bay, on the Arctic coast, between the Seahorse islands and Point BarroM', 



Named by Beechey in August, 1826, after his tirst lieutenant, George Peard. 



Often written Pearl and on one chart Pedrl. 

 I'nirl, bay; see Peard. 

 Pearl; jioint, in the eastern part of Bucareli bay. Prince of Wales archipelago. 



Named Punta de Perlas (point of i)earls) by Maurelle an<l Quadra in 



1775-1779. 

 Pearse; canal, north of Pearse island, Alexander ai-chipelagt). S(j named by Pender 



in 1868. 

 Pearse; island, at mouth of Portland canal, Alexander archipelago. So named l)y 



Pender in 1868. 

 Peavey; post-oflice and mining camp, on the north bank of the Koyukuk, near 



longitude 152°. It is also called Peavy and Peavy Trading Post. 

 I'eiM, bay; see Peard. 

 Pcerleshin; mountain, on the mainland, east of the Stikine river and near the 



international boundary. Native name, from the Coast Survey. Has beer 



written Peerleshin and Pereleshin, i. e., Pereles river. 

 Peirce; cape, a little east of Cape Newenham, on the north shore of Bristol bay. 



Named Peirce, in 1869, by the Coast Survey, after Prof. Benjamin Peirce, 



then Superintendent of the Coast Survey. Tebenkof calls it Peschera (cave) 



p(jint. Perhaps it is Calm point of Cook in 1778. See Calm. 

 Peirce; mountain (more than 2,000 feet high), on the northern part of Nagai island, 



Shnmagin group. So called by Dall, in 1872, after Prof. Benjamin Peii( 



then Superintendent of the Coast Survey. 



