Totsenbet; river, tributary to the Koyukuk, from the north, near longitude 149°. 

 Native name, from Sehrader and the Coast Survey. PubUshed as Totsen- 

 betna, i. e., Totsenbet river. 



Tuugidak, island; see Tugidak. 



Toujojak: Langsdorf, in 1814, (Voyage, II, 235) gives this as the name of a native 

 village in Kukak hay, Alaska peninsula. 



ToulaksaiHinml, village; see Tuluksak. 



TouUoidiaga, eape; see Lazaref. 



Toumtk, i.^land; see Chernobour. 



Tiiniuihlinik, island; see Little Koninji. 



Tournay; mountain (5,532 feet high), on the eastern shore of Portland canal. So 

 named by Pender in 1868. 



Tiinr.t, Isle des; see Pinnacle. 



Tower; l)luff, on the Tanana river, near longitude 144°. So named by Allen in 1885. 



Tower Bluff; rapids, in the Tanana, near the above. So named by Allen in 1885. 



Towhead; mountain (4,858 feet high), between the Tana and Chitina rivers. So 

 named by Schrader in 1900. 



Townsend; point, on the southern shore of Admiralty island, Frederick sound, 

 Alexander archipelago. Named Townshend and Townsend by Vancou- 

 ver in 1794. On map 12 of his atlas it is Townshend; in his text (8° ed., 

 vol. 5, p. 445) it is Townsend. Perhaps identical with Brightman of 

 recent charts. See Brightman. 



Toivshecargul, river; see Tozi. 



Toiioiiok, village; see Tyonok. 



Tozi; river, tributary to the Yukon, from the north, near longitude 152° 30''. 

 Native name, reported by the Western Union Telegrajih Expedition, 

 1867, as Towshecargut. Raymond, 1869, wrote it Tosekargut, and Allen, 

 1885, Tozikakat. See Kakat. 



Track; rock (covered at high water), near the entrance to Tongass harbor, Alexan- 

 der archipelago. So named by Nichols, in 1883. 



Tracy; arm, of Holkham bay, Stephens passage, southeastern Alaska. So named 

 by Mansfield, in 1889, after the Hon. Benjamin Franklin Tracy, Secretary 

 of the Navy. 



Tracy; island, near southern shore of Wales island, Dixon entrance, Alexander 

 archipelago. Named by the Coast Survey, in 1891, after Hon. B. F. Tracy, 

 Secretary of the Navy. 



Traders, bay; see Trading. 



Traders; cove, indenting the extreme western end of Alaska peninsula, in Isanotski 

 strait. New Morzhovoi village is situated on this cove. Local name, 

 published by the Coast Survey in 1882. 



Traders; group of islands, west of Thatcher point, at eastern entrance to Peril strait, 

 Alexander archipelago. Named Traitors {not Traders) by Meade in 1869. 

 The statement in the Coast Pilot (1883, p. 167) that Meade gave the name 

 Traders is not borne out by his chart (U. S. Hydrographic No. 225). On 

 that chart the name is Traitors. This error has been accepted and fol- 

 lowed in recent C. S. publications. The name Traitors has vanished. 

 Traders remains and is applied (on C. S. chart 8283) as here given and 

 on C. S. chart 8050 to a large island or peninsula south of these. 



Trading; bay, on the northwestern shore of Cook inlet. So named by Portlock, 

 who in August, 1786, anchored and traded here. 



Trail; creek, tributary to Kenai lake, from the north, Kenai peninsula. Local 

 name, published in 1899. 



Traitors; cove, in Behm canal, indenting the western shore of Revillagigedo island, 

 Alexander archipelago. So named by Vancouver, in 1793, to commemorate 

 an attack on his surveying party by a band of Indians coming from this cove. 



