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2nd arrows, lances and knives, made of 
raindeer's bones, hatchets of a hard black 
ftone, with which they likewife make the 
points of their lances. As foon as thefe 
people perceived us, they wanted to fall 
upon us, after their brutim cuflom,*-to rob 
and murder us. They are particularly 
fpiteful againft all people that come from 
the diftricl of Kamtfchatka ; and, in ge- 
neral, they are dangerous to all frrangers 
who approach their iiland. They live in 
yurts or cellars under ground, where 
there does not appear the leafc clean- 
linefs, as in the huts of the Kamtfchadales. 
By way of ornament, they bore their 
under lip, where they hang fine bones of 
hearts and birds, as other nations wear 
•ornaments to their ears. They commonly 
paint their faces with red, blue, and other 
colours. The men bear wooden fhields, 
which they call Kujaki. They go out to 
fea, either alone or two or three together, 
in their Baidars, which arc light, fmall 
and long boats, made of fea-dog's fkin. 
They have likewife large Baidars, in which 
1 ; more 
