BAKER.] 40] Tcli-Ten. 



Tchinkitanay, h&y, see Sitka sound. 



Tchmkoff, island; see Cliirikof. 



Tchitchagow, cape; see Chichagof. 



Tchitnal:, village; see Chitnak. 



Tchougatskoi, mountains; see Chugach. 



Tchoiighinadol-h, island; see Chuginadak. 



Tchougoulak, island; see Chugul. 



Tchougoule, island; see Chugul. 



TcJiougoulok, island; see Chugul. 



Tchounok, cape; see Chunak. 



Tclmk, cape; see Stephens. 



Tclmna, cape; see Chunu. 

 : Tear; islet, one of the Ball group, Sitka sound, Alexander archipelago. So named 

 by United States naval officers in 1880. 



Tebay; river, tributary to the Chitina, from the south, about 30 miles above its 

 mouth. So called by Allen, in 1885, who says that Tebay is the Indian 

 name of a variety of sheep. 



Tebenkof ; bay, indenting the western coast of Kuiu island, Chatham strait, Alex- 

 ander archipelago. Named Tebienkof bay by Dall, in 1879, after Capt. 

 Michael Dmitrievich Tebienkof or Tebenkof, governor of the Eussian- 



♦ American colonies 1845-50. This name has been variously transliterated 



Tebenkoff, Tebenkov, Tebienkoff, etc. 

 Tebenkof, bay; see St. Michael. 



Tebenkof; mountain (4,100 feet high), east of Yakutat bay, southeastern Alaska. 

 Named by Russell, in 1890, after Capt. Michael Dmitrievich Tebienkof or 

 Tebenkof, governor of the Russian-American colonies 1845-50. Both the 

 forms Tebienkof and Tebenkof have been much used. 

 I Tee-at-iokwik. Dall, writing in 1869, gives this as the native name of a stream in 

 the Yukon delta a little north of Black river. 

 Tefaknak; Eskimo village, of 10 houses, in the delta between the Kuskokwim and 

 Yukon rivers. Called Tefaknaghamiut, i. e., Tefaknak people, in the 

 Eleventh Census, 1890. Population, 195. 

 Teikhell, river; see Tiekel and Uranatina. 



Telegraph; hill, about IJ miles north of St. Paul village, St. Paul island, Pribilof 

 group, Bering sea. Presumably a local name, published by the Coast 

 Survey in 1875. 

 Teller; reindeer station, Grantley harbor, Seward peninsula. Established by Shel- 

 don Jackson, in 1892, and named by him after Hon. Henry Moore Teller, 

 Secretary of the Interior. Afterwards moved to north shore of Port Clar- 

 ence. Now there is a town and post-office (established in April, 1900) 

 Ion the spit forming the south point of entrance to Grantley harbor. 

 This place is called locally and by "the old-timers" The Nook, a name 

 derived from the Eskimo. Beechey, 1827, says the natives call it Nooke, 

 or, as we would now write it, Nuk. Dall, in 1869, wrote Nookmut and 

 Petrof, in 1880, Nookmute, i. e., Nook people. 

 Temnie, island; see Dark. 



Tenakee ; inlet, indenting the northeastern shore of Chichagof island. Native name, 

 adopted by the Coast Survey in 1869. A portage 150 yards long is said to 

 connect its head with Port Frederick. Variously designated as a canal, 

 channel, inlet, and passage and named Berry, Blind, Siwash, and Tenakee. 

 Tenas; creek, tributary to the Copper river, from the east. Chinook name, mean- 

 ing little, given by the prospectors. 

 Tenazie; peak, near the international Iwundary line, on the headwaters of Old Crow 

 river, near latitude 68°. So called by the Coast Survey in 1895. 



Bull. 187—01 26 



